The Grinnell Magazine Winter 2015

Transcription

The Grinnell Magazine Winter 2015
Cover and TOC photos courtesy of Burling Library Archives, Grinnell College
Departments
2
Letters
35
Giving
4
Strategy Session
37
Prompted
5
Campus News
38
Classnotes
12
Artists and Scholars
45
15
Quote Board
47 Back Talk
16
Pioneers
18
Then and Now
In Memoriam
48 That’s So Grinnellian
Elise Hadden ’14 has her eye
on the prize.
Features
20
24
Social Justice: From
Theory to Practice
How the Grinnell Prize embeds global
innovation into campus culture
by Elise Hadden ’14
The Iowa Caucuses
Grinnell College’s tradition of activism
intertwines with Iowa’s heavy impact on
presidential campaigns
by Carroll McKibbin ’60
31
Faces of Philanthropy
Alumni invest in the future
by Denton Ketels
Denton Ketels’ superpower is
understanding sports statistics.
Lisa Lacher introduces the media to
Grinnellians doing cool things.
Carroll McKibbin ’60, a native Iowan,
no longer lived in the state when its
caucuses became a big deal.
Winter 2015
Volume 48 Number 2
Email: [email protected]
Editor
Michele Regenold ’89
[email protected]
Art Director / Designer
Larissa Stalcup
[email protected]
Classnotes Editor
Michele Tanzosch
[email protected]
Editorial Staff
Dana Boone
Elise Hadden ’14
Denton Ketels
Lisa Lacher
Photographer
Justin Hayworth
Office of Communications
Vice President for
Communications
Jim Reische
[email protected]
Director of Communications
Jim Powers
[email protected]
Contributors
Cindy Deppe is data-phobic but
appreciates those who aren’t.
The Grinnell
Magazine
Mary Knuth Otto ’63,
now a Vermonter, is
a strong advocate for
alumni connections to
Grinnell.
Neither Michele
Regenold ’89 nor
Justin Hayworth got
to ride in a firetruck or
slide down a fire pole.
The Grinnell Magazine
(ISSN 1539-0950) is published
quarterly by Grinnell College, Office
of Communications, 733 Broad St.,
Grinnell, IA 50112. Periodicals postage
paid at Grinnell, IA,
and additional mailing offices.
© Copyright Grinnell College, 2015
POSTMASTER
Send address changes to:
The Grinnell Magazine
733 Broad Street
Grinnell, IA 50112
FAX: 641-269-3408
Email: [email protected]
Mission Statement
The Grinnell Magazine is published
quarterly for alumni, students, parents,
faculty, and friends of the College by
the Office of Communications. The
contents of this magazine are selected
to stimulate thought and discussion,
to demonstrate the range of opinions
and activities on the campus and in
its broader community, and to provide
news about the College and its alumni.
Views expressed herein are those of the
authors and do not necessarily reflect
official policy of Grinnell College.
Central Switchboard
641-269-4000
World Wide Web
www.grinnell.edu
On the cover:
Gov. Jimmy Carter, D-Ga., campaigns
for president at the Forum, December
1975.
Letters
I really like the new Grinnell
Magazine format. I especially like the
new page size; I found the previous larger size more awkward to handle.
the
– Genevieve Tvrdik ’55
Lancaster, Pa.
Reactions to the
new design
I like the new look and feel of the
magazine. A better size, more text
and pictures on the page, fewer
big fashionable swatches of empty
space. I like the “Then and Now”
feature and hope it will continue.
And your piece on Georgia Dentel
is wonderful; she arrived after I
graduated, but she was obviously
a great asset to the College. My
one quibble about this issue: Think
of “Autumn in New York” (Billie
Holiday), “Autumn Leaves” (Nat
King Cole), “Early Autumn” (Stan
Getz), “Autumn Serenade” ( John
Coltrane), or just “Autumn” (Barbra
Streisand) and replace autumn with
fall in those titles. Doesn’t sound
nearly as good. No one writes about
fall. So why is this called the fall
issue and not the autumn issue?
– Bill Ingram ’53
Ann Arbor, Mich.
I really like your new feature “Artists
and Scholars,” which features the
covers of books by alumni. I went
and bought Bryan Crockett ’76’s
book right away. Not only was he
in my class, but I really liked the
description of the novel.
– Lynn Voedisch Blumenthal ’76
Lincolnwood, Ill.
2 The Grinnell Magazine
I was delighted when I caught my
first glimpse of the cover on the most
recent issue of The Grinnell Magazine
and realized that, indeed, Kevin
Cannon ’02 is back!
I’m sure I sent what I hope
was not an impolite message of
disappointment to the then-editor
when Cannon’s cartoons stopped
gracing the pages several years
ago. But I held out hope that he
might one day reappear. Prayers are
answered! Satchmo on the cover,
illustrations on the inside, and an
editorial promise of more to come!
As you can guess by now, I’m
a fan of Kevin Cannon. In his
honor and in appreciation of the
reappearance of his work, I will be
sending in an additional contribution
to Grinnell for this year.
– Dave Scott ’50
Moorhead, Minn.
Having just received my new fall
issue of The Grinnell Magazine, I am
happy to share with you how much
I like the new format. It is both hip
and retro at the same time. I like the
feel of it. It just totally works. This
magazine now has an improved look
and feel. I’m also pleased to see that
you continue to use Suzanne Kelsey
as a professional writer for your
magazine.
– Carol Baker ’83
Berea, Ohio
Inside fine. Outside says you’ve
forgotten who your audience is. No
class.
– Don Martin ’49
Pleasanton, Calif.
Kudos to the Liberal Arts
in Prison Program
I was so pleased to read the excellent
article in The Grinnell Magazine
Summer 2015 issue about the
College’s program that offers
education services to men, women,
and youths who are incarcerated at
nearby correctional facilities. In my
career, I have spent many years trying
to help people in the “free world”
recognize and embrace the humanity
of people consigned to live without
basic freedoms inside institutions
which rarely rehabilitate and often
retraumatize the victims of violence
and prejudice and poverty.
I was so proud to learn that
my alma mater was among a group
of elite liberal arts colleges trying
to make a real difference in these
people’s lives by providing them
with what research shows to be the
most effective deterrent to crime and
violence: a quality education. The
vast majority of people in prison will
be released at some point; helping
to prepare them to be good citizens,
parents, neighbors, and contributors
to the legal economies in our
communities makes sense on every
level.
I also applaud the College
for exposing students to the harsh
realities of the world in a structured
and safe way that allows them to
be part of the solution to mass
incarceration, now one of the most
pressing problems in America,
acknowledged by leaders across
the political spectrum. I have been
honored to support this program with
a donation, and I am thrilled that
many of my fellow alums have done
the same. For me, the Liberal Arts in
Prison Program continues to make it
obvious why Grinnell matters.
– Tracy Huling ’77
Founder/Director,
Prison Public Memory Project
Freehold, N.Y.
Honoring Georgia
Dentel
Legalizing marijuana
As an Oregon bankruptcy attorney who previously has practiced criminal
defense law, I found Denton Ketels’ [“Making Marijuana Legal,” Page 18,
Fall 2015] interview personally fascinating since recreational marijuana
became legal in Oregon on Oct. 1. Unfortunately, the interview format used
perhaps necessarily omitted the practical problems encountered when trying
to initiate such a ballot measure passed by the voters.
In Oregon the job was given to the State Liquor Control Commission,
which requested input from small businesses, conducted town halls, and
even created an online survey for Oregonians. The practical issues:
• The concern about access by children to marijuana cookies and candy
— the “Joe Camel” factor.
• Regulatory interface with the medical providers who also wish to sell
retail.
• Scientific quality control including graded THC levels. Current
marijuana is far stronger than that consumed by my own “Woodstock
generation.”
• Preventing outside big business, such as the tobacco companies, from
taking over.
• Creating a seamless “farm to table” system but not overregulating.
• Developing an effective roadside drug test for drivers who are possibly
[impaired] from the drug.
All of the above would have been inconceivable as I dangled my feet
over the window ledge in Gates Tower and smoked my own stash while
blasting the Grateful Dead across Mac Field.
– James MacAfee ’76
Salem, Ore.
The Grinnell Magazine welcomes letters from readers concerning the contents
of the magazine or issues relating to the College. All letters should include
the author’s name and address. Anonymous letters will be discarded. Letters
selected for publication may be edited for length, content, and style. Address
correspondence to: The Grinnell Magazine, Office of Communications, Grinnell
College, Grinnell, IA 50112-1690 or send email to [email protected].
So glad Grinnell is honoring
Georgia’s contributions to the
College. I had the pleasure of
working as concerts chair and
thoroughly enjoyed working with
her. We had many great performers
that year, but I am particularly
proud of Chick Corea, Allan
Holdsworth, and the Modern Jazz
Quartet. MJQ were on a reunion
tour and Georgia worked her
magic to get them to take a detour
through Grinnell.
– Jim Asplund ’88
Woodbury, Minn.
Thank you so much for the well
researched, well written, and
entertaining feature on Georgia
Dentel. The tribute was due, and
it’s wonderful it was done so well.
I worked with Miss Dentel for
three years, and knowing her
and learning from her are among
the best things I took away from
Grinnell.
Miss Dentel was always her
own person. I am sure she still is.
At a time when those of us from
the middle of the country were
trying to become sophisticated like
those from the coasts, and when
the students living off campus were
cool beyond our reach, Miss Dentel
went her own way. It could be zero
degrees in winter, and she would
stride the campus in a thin leather
jacket and spike-heeled black
patent leather pumps. She said she
wanted to get used to the cold so
she could save her winter clothes
for when she really needed them.
She listened. She laughed. She
got along with almost everybody.
She was an inspiration to people
who didn’t fit in easily.
– Keith J. King ’66
New York
Winter 2015
3
Strategy Session
Campus News
Vision 2030
In his June 1906 inauguration speech, Grinnell president
John H.T. Main predicted a future when a person could
sit at the breakfast table and speak by phone with a
friend in Berlin or Hong Kong “while the wheat cakes
are coming in.”
Forty-six years later, another of my presidential
predecessors, Howard Bowen, faced off against claims
that “closed-circuit TV is as good as live teaching. That
street-car colleges are as good as residential colleges, or
that assembly-line teaching is as good as individualized
instruction.”
Main and Bowen were each setting out a vision for
Grinnell: for how this small but ambitious school would
fulfill its mission and values in changing times.
Today, with tremendous help from alumni, the
College is on a strong footing — strong enough that the
board of trustees felt confident reaffirming our needblind admission policies at its last meeting [See Page 9].
But times are changing. With our admission pool and
alumni engagement at historic highs, now is the time
to articulate a new vision for Grinnell’s next phase of
excellence.
What does it take to prepare Grinnellians for
meaningful lives and careers in the future? We need to
invest in our educational core. While there will be many
aspects to this work, they all ultimately relate back to our
commitment to excellence in teaching and learning and
to helping students connect their education with their
goals for meaningful and rewarding lives.
This must be done in ways that are financially
accessible and sustainable, and which uphold our
commitment to diversity.
Following are some of the areas where we need to
direct our attention and investment:
Ÿ Individualized advising from faculty and staff,
who respect students enough to involve them in
shaping their own education.
Ÿ Advanced research and creative experiences that
equip students with analytical, communication,
and other critical skills, earning them the honor
of being mistaken for a graduate student.
Ÿ Courses and co-curricular experiences enriched
by global connections and local perspective,
proving that if you truly want to explore the
world, you need to come to central Iowa to
do it.
4 The Grinnell Magazine
Assigning All Incoming Students a Career Adviser
How it’s changing the conversation at the Center for Careers, Life, and Service
Attention to the unique benefits of learning as
part of a residential community, including the
educational value of diversity, self-governance,
and student leadership.
Ÿ A commitment to helping students from day
one connect their education to the lives they
want to lead, the careers they want to pursue,
and the difference they want to make in the
world.
This approach takes advantage of our distinctive
strengths and upholds our enduring values, while
equipping students for a new and changing world.
We are strong in many of these areas already. But
fulfilling Grinnell’s promise of an innovative education
for every student will require shared effort. All of us need
to work together — as teachers and mentors, donors
and volunteers, coaches and supporters — to ensure the
success of Grinnellians, and Grinnell, in new times.
Following his reverie about a world connected by
transoceanic calls, John Main observed that “the college,
a home of culture and ideals, must respond to the spirit
of the age if it is to be an effective agent and helper in
working out the complicated problems of society.”
Forty years later, Howard Bowen shared his
similar hope, “that through the increasing excellence
of our program, we [Grinnell] shall serve as a constant
reminder of what higher education should be and can
be, and that through our example, standards of higher
education generally will be raised.”
Today’s world has moved far beyond transatlantic
telephones, far beyond closed-circuit TV. We need
a vision for achieving our timeless mission in new
conditions. It is up to us — all of us — to envision the
College’s next future together. And then to realize it, for
the sake of generations of Grinnellians still to come.
Ÿ
– Raynard S. Kington, president
New for 2015–16, all first-year
students were assigned an adviser
from the Center for Careers, Life,
and Service (CLS). The purpose is
to integrate the CLS into students’
lives as soon as possible, so that
students can take full advantage of
the resources, programs, and CLS
advisers in an intentional way.
“The more we can engage with
first-year students early in their time
at Grinnell, the more likely they are
to come back [to the CLS],” says
Mark Peltz, Daniel ’77 and Patricia
Jipp ’80 Finkelman Dean of the
CLS.
The CLS advising staff met
with incoming first-years in several
large group sessions during New
Student Orientation. Students
participated in an activity that asked
them to identify their top 10 values
from a set of 44 value cards. Each
card included one value and a brief
definition such as “Duty: to carry
out my duties and obligations” and
“Creativity: to have new and original
ideas.”
Family, friendship, passion,
purpose, and knowledge were the
five most commonly cited values,
says Megan Crawford, director of
career counseling and exploration at
the CLS. The purpose of the activity
was to help students start thinking
about their values and how those
values are reflected in their decisionmaking, she says.
“What I love about this
activity,” Peltz says, “is it’s directly
linked to our mission, which is
empowering students and alumni to
live, learn, and work with meaning
and purpose. How can you do that if
you don’t have an understanding of
what’s important to you?”
To help reinforce this notion,
Kelly Guilbeau,
career counselor,
meets with
a student to
discuss her
values and how
they affect her
decision-making.
students met individually with
their career advisers for a followup appointment during the
fall semester. “It’s a relational
approach,” Crawford says. During
the individual session, adviser and
student discussed how one of the
student’s values affected a recent
decision.
“Many [students] cited their
decision to come to Grinnell,”
Crawford says. “Whether [the value]
was adventure or travel or even
self-knowledge, [students] seem to
understand the concept of those
decision-making processes.”
Each student also selected one
personal, professional, or civic goal
to work on this year, such as setting
up a job-shadow experience, creating
a personal advisory committee,
or taking a career or personality
assessment.
There was one result the
CLS didn’t foresee — helping a
couple of first-year students who
were seriously struggling with
whether they belong at Grinnell.
“We’ve reached out to their RLCs
[residence life coordinators] and
their faculty advisers,” Crawford
says, to make sure those students
“were on their radars.”
“This new initiative has
tightened the weave,” Peltz says. “It’s
harder for a student to slip through
and not get noticed. Early signs are
that it’s effective.”
Crawford says the new
program is also spurring a more
integrated adviser approach. CLS
has shared the student learning
outcomes as well as the activities
from both the individual and
group sessions with the First-Year
Tutorial professors, who are students’
faculty advisers, to provide an
understanding of the CLS approach.
“There’s a real strong appetite
from first-year students for this kind
of connection,” Peltz says. “Some
upper-class students who’ve learned
about this initiative have asked,
‘When do I get my CLS adviser?’
It’s an affirming message but also
speaks to the challenges. How will
we fully sustain this as a four-year
integrated advising approach as an
institution?”
Peltz says that next spring, the
CLS will evaluate data from this
first year to help determine next
steps. Meanwhile all students are
welcome at the CLS.
– Michele Regenold ’89
Winter 2015
5
Campus News
At the Faulconer Gallery
After Many Years of Service
Life trustees retire
Siberia: In the Eyes of Russian Photographers
January 29–March 20, 2016
This exhibition is a geographical portrait that has the potential to alter stereotypes about a famously remote region.
Photographs span more than 130 years, beginning with the late 19th century and continuing until the present.
The images include rural and urban scenes, landscapes, native peoples, agriculture and industry, Russian frontier
settlements, the Gulag, religion, and just plain everyday life.
The project is timely as Siberia’s role grows on a world stage. The region’s military, political, and economic
possibilities have intrigued individuals and nations for centuries. They do so now with renewed vigor as Siberia’s
energy and mineral resources and strategic location attract global attention. Leah Bendavid-Val, author of the book
Siberia: In the Eyes of Russian Photographers, curated the traveling exhibition, which is organized by the Foundation of
International Arts and Education.
Andrei Sharpan, Deer Breeders,
Kamchatka, 2007
Anastasia Rudenko, Krasnoyarsk, 2010
(November)
Anastasia Rudenko, Newlyweds, suburb
of Novosibirsk, 2010 (November)
Beverly Semmes: FRP
January 29–March 20, 2016
In her Feminist Responsibility Project, Beverly Semmes
conjures the work of a committee of rogue censors
charged with the revision of ’70s-era male “pictorial
literature.” In addition to this ongoing project, the
exhibition also features Semmes’ work in other media
— glass, ceramic, and video — as well as three of her
signature dress pieces, including one acquired by the
Faulconer Gallery in 2014.
This exhibition is co-organized with the Frances
Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at
Skidmore College. The catalog contains an interview
with Beverly Semmes and an essay by writer/curator
Ingrid Schaffner.
6 The Grinnell Magazine
Beverly Semmes
RC, 2014
Velvet
Faulconer Gallery, Grinnell
College Art Collection
Three long-serving life trustees
retired from their positions with the
Grinnell College Board of Trustees
in 2015.
Richard W. Booth ’54 was
first elected to the board in 1982
and became a life trustee in 2002.
Booth’s firm belief in the value of
the liberal arts and his hope for
the success of all Grinnell students
led to steady support of student
scholarships by Booth and his wife
Anne Chandler Booth ’56.
Richard Booth is part of
a family legacy of Grinnell
graduates starting with his greatgrandfather, David Norris 1872,
who founded Lennox Machine Co.
in Marshalltown, Iowa, in 1895, a
manufacturer of coal-fired furnaces.
After graduating from Grinnell,
Booth served in the U.S. Air Force
from 1954–58 as a jet pilot. An
economics major at Grinnell, Booth
began working for Lennox as an
inspector in 1958. He worked for
what is now Lennox International,
a furnace and air conditioning
manufacturer, for many years. He
was executive vice president and
secretary of the corporation until he
retired in 1997.
James H. Lowry ’61 was first
elected to the board in 1969 and
became a life trustee in 1995. He’s
contributed to campus building
and renovation projects such as the
Conney M. Kimbo Black Cultural
Center and the Charles Benson
Bear ’39 Recreation and Athletic
Center.
Lowry participated in three
Grinnell sports — baseball, football,
and basketball — and became the
first Pioneer in 30 years to earn
nine varsity letters. He majored
in political science at Grinnell
and went on to earn a master’s in
public international affairs from
the University of Pittsburgh; he
also attended the Program for
Management Development at
Harvard Business School.
In 1978, he and his team at
James H. Lowry & Associates in
Chicago wrote a groundbreaking
study for the U.S. Department of
Commerce, “A New Strategy for
Minority Business Development.”
A world-renowned authority on
minority business development,
Lowry is co-author of Minority
Business Success: Refocusing on the
American Dream (Stanford Business
Books, 2011).
Ronald T. Gault ’62 was elected
to the board in 1987 and became
a life trustee in 2002. He and his
wife Charlayne Hunter-Gault have
contributed generously of their time
and talents to students.
A former member of the Board
of Higher Education of New York,
he has been involved in minority
advancement programs and has
contributed advice and counsel to
the College in this regard.
A political science major at
Grinnell, Gault had a wide-ranging
career that included work with
USAID, the U.S. Foreign Service,
the U.S. Department of Justice,
the Ford Foundation, First Boston
Corporation, and J.P. Morgan. For
J.P. Morgan, he served as CEO of
business development and client
relations in Johannesburg, South
Africa. Gault and his wife also began
producing South African wine in
2003 under the label Passages.
– Michele Regenold ’89
Richard W. Booth ’54
James H. Lowry ’61
Ronald T. Gault ’62
Winter 2015
7
Campus News
Champion
of Change
Championing
Healing
2015 Schwab Alumni
Grants awarded
White House honors Yesenia Ayala ’18
The White House recently recognized
Yesenia Ayala ’18 and 10 other
young women selected from more
than 1,000 nominees as “Champions
of Change” for empowering
and inspiring members of their
communities. At a ceremony on
Sept. 15, Ayala was honored for
her contributions to the Latino
community in Iowa.
As a service learning work-study
student at Grinnell, Ayala works
for Al Exito, a nonprofit group that
empowers Latino youth in nine Iowa
cities. She coordinates programming
and mentoring for middle and high
school Latino students, facilitates
family programming and events, and
engages other Grinnell students in
encouraging Latino students to stay
in school and plan for college.
“Through my personal
experience,” she says, “I was able to
bring awareness to not only the local
[and] state, but national community
of the importance of mentoring and
supporting students who come from
disadvantaged backgrounds, and
how we can all come together as one
to make the movement work.” She often shares her story at Al
Exito events to inspire others. “I was
working full time at McDonald’s as
a manager while in high school, I
was going to high school in a very
low-income community, and I was
striving to get As,” Ayala says. “I was
also taking the responsibility and the
role of helping my parents raise my
siblings.”
Ayala is majoring in sociology
and Spanish with a concentration in
Latin American Studies. She plans to
pursue a law degree and specialize in
civil rights.
– Lisa Lacher
Yesenia Ayala ’18,
pictured third from left
8 The Grinnell Magazine
Amy Neevel ’95,
a researcher at
University of North
Carolina at Chapel
Hill, received a $1,500
grant to support the
development of a peer-mentoring
video web project to promote
reintegration and reduce the risk
of HIV in previously incarcerated
women in North Carolina and across
the country.
Beth Prullage ’94,
a social worker at
Providence Behavioral
Health Hospital
in Holyoke, Mass.,
will use her $1,500
Schwab grant to maintain and
expand the music therapy resources
at the hospital.
Erin Hustings ’98, a
founding member of
the D.C., Detention
Visitation Network,
obtained $1,500
to reinforce and
magnify the program’s efforts in
providing support and friendship
to immigration detainees in the
Washington, D.C. area.
Lori Ann Schwab ’95 Alumni
Grants are presented annually to
alumni who graduated between 1992
and 1998 and who are staff members
or volunteers in nonprofit service
organizations and public schools.
Schwab was committed to
helping others. She died of a sudden
illness while studying in London in
1994.
– Elise Hadden ’14
Need-Blind
Policy Retained
Board to review commitment in 2018
The Grinnell College Board of Trustees voted in October 2015 to retain the
policies of need-blind admission and meeting 100 percent of demonstrated
financial need for domestic students, subject to annual monitoring and
reassessment in 2018. The school’s operating budget currently relies too heavily on the annual
payout from its $1.8 billion endowment, according to President Raynard
S. Kington. Increases in philanthropy and net student revenue are seen as
long-term solutions to endowment pressure.
The board’s affirmation of Grinnell’s need-blind policy is significant in
the context of national concern about rising college costs. Given Grinnell’s
endowment and its position as a leader in affordability among national
liberal arts schools, a decision to abandon need-blind admission could have
been interpreted as a troubling signal about the long-term viability of such
policies.
“We remain committed to our long-standing policies, and we are
confident in our ability to ensure financial sustainability for the College,”
Kington says. “We will continue to experiment with various strategies for
improving net student revenue and philanthropic gifts until we reach our
revenue goals.”
The College’s long-term revenue goal, Kington says, is 45 percent from
endowment returns, 45 percent from net student revenue, and 10 percent
from philanthropy and other revenue. Current percentages stand at 55
percent, 39 percent, and six percent, respectively.
Philanthropy has become increasingly important in reducing reliance
on the endowment. Gifts to Grinnell College rose again in fiscal year 2015,
with alumni giving up 8.8 percent over 2014. Total receipts for fiscal year
2015 reached $14.1 million, up 26.6 percent from the previous year.
Joe Bagnoli, vice president of enrollment and dean of admission and
financial aid, says, “In order to meet the ambitious objective of generating
enough student revenue to meet 45 percent of the operating budget,
Grinnell will develop strategies for pricing, branding, marketing, enrollment
management, and tuition discounting.”
The College also works to control costs through a campus-wide
budgeting process, guiding the strategic allocation of resources.
The October vote fulfilled a 2013 board resolution instructing the
College to ensure its financially sustainable future while upholding the
values of financial accessibility and academic excellence. That resolution
called for the board to review the College’s progress and reassess need-blind
admission for domestic students in the fall of 2015.
– Denton Ketels
Clark Lindgren
Honored
Helps students from
underrepresented
backgrounds
Clark Lindgren, Patricia A.
Johnson Professor of Neuroscience
and professor of biology, has been
selected as the Iowa Professor of
the Year of 2015. A member of the
faculty since 1992, Lindgren has
strived to help students from groups
traditionally underrepresented in
the sciences overcome external
challenges and find success in
scientific fields.
Lindgren says, “For each
student I try to be appropriately
demanding and yet encouraging
at the same time, and that to me
is really the essence of what good
teaching is about — finding that
balance.”
He is a pioneer of engaging,
authentic, and interdisciplinary
biology teaching methods. He
was a co-architect of the upsidedown biology curriculum, in which
students are immersed in research
from their first biology course. Now
emulated across the country, Biology
150 is, according to a colleague and
nominator, “an important transition
from faculty-centered teaching to
student-centered learning.”
Read more: grinnell.edu/news/
clark-lindgren-iowa-professor­
year.
– Lisa Lacher
Winter 2015
9
Photos by Andy Kropa ’98
Outside Federal Hall
Driven by DATA, Connected by Grinnell
Alumni in tech careers share insights during fall break
by Cindy Deppe
I
t was all in the DATA for the fall break tour, Oct. 19–24, that connected
20 students seeking career insights with alumni who work in tech startups
and at giga-giant Google, in the financial services industry, and in research
at a renowned cancer center.
The New York City tour, sponsored by the Donald L. Wilson Program in
Enterprise and Leadership, the Center for Careers, Life and Service, and the
Office of Development and Alumni Relations, was nicknamed DATA for its
emphasis on data analysis, technology, and applications.
But it wasn’t all stats and spreadsheets as Grinnellians, old and new, learned
from each other about the prospects for data-based careers.
For Emily Zabor ’03, a research biostatistician at Memorial Sloan
Kettering Cancer Center, the satisfaction of sharing career insights with
students came from being reminded that “as an undergraduate, I had never
heard of biostatistics or considered the field of public health. So I was excited to
share my experiences and opportunities in this way.”
Zabor and co-worker Anne Eaton ’08 collaborate with doctors to design
studies about new cancer drugs, for example, and use data to determine how
many patients are needed for a valid study, plan the study design, develop
hypotheses, and analyze results.
10 The Grinnell Magazine
The charging bull on Wall Street
“My field is specialized
but could be very appealing to
Grinnellians because it’s cuttingedge research and public service,”
Zabor says.
Biology major Jarren Santos ’17
calls the Sloan Kettering visit
“pivotal” in his career exploration.
“The DATA tour helped me
explore how research and data is
applied to a company setting,” Santos
says. “These individuals were working
with data in upcoming health
innovations while collaborating with
public health experts to determine
the impact of new surgeries or the
decrease in survivorship of a certain
disease. I could totally imagine
myself doing this.”
The impetus for the DATA
tour grew from student interest
and faculty recognition of the
pervasiveness of data in today’s
workplace. Kathy Kamp, Earl D.
Strong Professor of Social Studies,
accompanied the tour in her work
as director of the College’s Data
Analysis and Social Inquiry Lab
(DASIL).
“With the centrality of data
in the modern world, we are doing
students a service to engage with
data and to visualize how data can
be used in creative ways,” Kamp said.
“The range of work environments
and agendas was fascinating, as well
as the diversity of majors among
alumni who are now involved in the
field.”
Grinnell Trustee Michael
Kahn ’74 was a music major at
Grinnell and is now an executive in
corporate strategy and development
for TIAA-CREF, a nonprofit
corporation. He has hosted a stream
of interns over the past 15 years and
enthusiastically agreed to be on the
short-term DATA tour schedule.
TIAA-CREF employees Chris
Lee ’15, Derek Farnam ’13, and
Christina Mantiziba Cutlip ’83
traveled to New York to join Kahn
in hosting the tour, as did employee
Hans Erickson, son of Luther
Erickson, professor emeritus of
chemistry, and Jenny Erickson,
retired Forum director.
“There is great potential for
TIAA-CREF to be a landing place
for Grinnell students,” Kahn says.
“What we do with data is diverse
and impactful in a meaningful way.
Deep analysis and modeling drives
superior investments; it’s about
getting better outcomes for the
people we serve.”
Hilary Mason ’00, founder and
CEO of Fast Forward Labs, gave
students a peek into her 18-month­
old machine intelligence research
business, which reviews research
papers, engineering systems, and
products that demonstrate machine
learning capabilities, then writes
about the evolving technology for a
general audience.
“All of the technical prototypes
we demonstrated for the students
use capabilities that only became
possible in the last couple of years,”
Mason says. “The main point of our
tour presentation was not so much
the specific projects that we work
on, but the idea that technology is
always evolving, and if you want to
succeed in this industry, it helps to
be excited by that.”
Ajuna Kyaruzi ’17, a computer
science major from Dar es Salaam,
Tanzania, has followed Mason’s
varied and ambitious career path.
“I was very excited to get the
chance to talk to Hilary Mason,”
Kyaruzi says. “Her career was one I
have been following for awhile, so
speaking to her and learning more
about her experiences post-Grinnell
was a real opportunity. This past
summer I interned at Twitter and
got a glimpse of how data drives
decisions that a technical company
makes, so I was curious to see how
other fields use and analyze their
data.”
The DATA tour also included
visits to Bloomberg with Kate
Macey ’00, Tony Mitzak ’86, and
Joan Johnson ’92; to Lieberman
Research Worldwide with Kasia
Piekarz ’01; at Google with
Peter Likarish ’04; at Makeover
Solutions with Steve Elkes ’83; at
CredSpark with Lev Kaye ’92; and
at EDGE Edtech with Ashantha
Kaluarachchi ’05.
“Diversity of majors and
experience was the primary takeaway
from meeting alumni,” Santos says.
“You do not have to major in a
business-related field to partake in
business and finance or major in a
mathematical field to do research
in biostatistics. The alumni really
emphasized the fact that their
diversity was a key component in
their career success.”
Observing the interactions
and connections among current
and former students was especially
rewarding for Monty Roper,
Donald Wilson Professor of
Enterprise and Leadership and
Wilson Program faculty director.
“What I most appreciated
hearing from alumni is that they
gained the ability to do things ‘they
had no right doing’ because they
didn’t question that they couldn’t.
That’s the value of the liberal arts,”
Roper says.
Kahn urges fellow alumni to
consider reaching out to students:
“If you feel your success is what you
took away from Grinnell, you are
reaffirming the impact of Grinnell
on the world by connecting with
a student. It’s a very powerful
connection.”
Alumni interested in sharing
their workplace experiences with
students on future break tours may
contact Nate Dobbels, assistant
director of alumni relations for
career programs, dobbelsn@
grinnell.edu, 641-269-3204.
Winter 2015
11
Artists and Scholars
Arts
Botanical art installation
Lee Running, associate professor of art,
created an art installation for the Grinnell
Regional Medical Center’s enlarged
chemotherapy suite. She used the windows
and suite walls as a canvas for a botanical
art installation. The piece includes a 200­
foot, dimensional mural of painted flowers
and hand-cut silhouettes. Windows are
etched with floral patterns, creating a
botanical screen. “Working on the glass
itself means the light changes the botanical
shadows in the room over the course of the
day,” Running says.
Erika Krouse ’91 published her second novel last
spring. Contenders (Rare Bird Books, 2015) is about a
street fighter named Nina Black. Nina steals wallets and
takes advantage of men who try to take advantage of
her. This symbiosis is upended when one of her marks,
a cop and comeback contender, wants his wallet and his
dignity back.
Success and
the Clergy
12 The Grinnell Magazine
Emily Bergl ’97 has signed on for a recurring role in
season two of American Crime, an ABC anthology series.
Michael Maiorana ’12, a music composer who has
composed for the Central Iowa Symphony, was chosen
to be mentored in the VocalEssence ReMix program.
VocalEssence is a nationally acclaimed choral ensemble
that has added a new educational program to cultivate
an upcoming generation of choral music composers.
Maiorana was paired with experienced composer
J. David Moore for a six-month one-on-one
mentorship to create choral pieces that premiered at the
American Choral Directors Association of Minnesota’s
state conference on Nov. 20.
Dennis Maulsby ’64 has published a new short story,
“The Night of the Pooka,” in the September 2015 issue
of Mused Literary Review. Read the story online at www.
bellaonline.com/review/issues/fall2015/f008.html.
Nancy Homan Stroupe ’59 had a retrospective of her
paintings, prints, drawings, and tiles exhibited at the
Carnegie Center for the Arts, Three Rivers, Mich., June
14–Aug. 8, 2015.
Scholarship and professional publications
Contenders
Ted McConnell ’60 has
published Success and the
Clergy (Inkwater Press,
2015) for all clergy who
have been called by God,
for those struggling
with that call, and for
all people seeking to
understand this calling.
Bruce Armstrong ’69 published “Four Boys & One
Excellent Adventure” in the August/September 2015
issue of BoatUS Magazine. The article tells the story
of the 1898 voyage of four 18-year-old boys who
accomplished the first known circumnavigation of the
eastern United States, a route now known as America’s
Great Loop. The voyage took them from Lake
Michigan through the Chicago River to the Mississippi
and the Gulf of Mexico, then around Florida and
up the East Coast, returning to the Great Lakes and
Michigan through the Hudson River and the Erie
Canal. They accomplished this perilous voyage on a
shoestring budget in a sailboat they built themselves.
Actor Peter Coyote ’64 won an Emmy as
outstanding narrator in the creative arts
on Sept. 12. He lent his voice to PBS’s The
Roosevelts: An Intimate History and was
specifically awarded for “Episode 1: Get
Action (1858–1901).” This was the first
ever primetime Emmy for the veteran
character actor.
The American Immigration Lawyers Association
published Dree Collopy ’04’s book, AILA’s Asylum
Primer, a comprehensive guide to U.S. asylum law and
procedure and the premier resource for representing
refugees and asylum-seekers in the United States.
The book is available at agora.aila.org/product/
detail/2521.
Gautam Ghoush ’83 edited Asians and the New
Multiculturalism in Aotearoa New Zealand, University of
Otago Press, 2015, 312 pages.
Ron Goodenow ’63 has published “Service
Across Cultures: A Case of the Emerging Role of
Communications Technology in Rotary International”
in Elizabeth Christopher’s International Management
and Intercultural Communication (Basingstoke, U.K.:
Palgrave Macmillan, 2015). Goodenow is an active
Rotarian who has developed several information
technology-focused projects for Rotary and is widely
published on information technology and educational
and health care services.
Lizeth Gutierrez ’12 has published work in Aztlán:
A Journal of Chicano Studies, Mujeres Talk, and The
Encyclopedia of Social Theory. She has forthcoming
publications in an anthology, Gendering XXI: Women
as Protagonists in U.S. Latino and Hispanic Caribbean
Narratives and Aztlán. Some of her recent awards
include the Graduate Studies Enhancement Grant
by the Social Science Research Council (2014) and
Washington State University’s College of Arts and
Sciences/Liberal Arts Scholarship (2013).
Jeanne Pinder ’75 and two co-researchers, Jan Schaffer,
executive director of J-Lab at American University,
and Mimi Onuoha, an artist and researcher, won a
fellowship at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism
at Columbia University to analyze and report on
crowdsourcing in journalism. The project is funded by
the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
Jerod Weinman, associate professor of computer
science, and his collaborator Erik Learned-Miller at the
University of Massachusetts-Amherst have received a
three-year grant from the National Science Foundation
(NSF) for a project entitled “Adaptive Integration
of Textual and Geospatial Information for Mining
Massive Map Collections.” They will be developing
new methods to extract textual and spatial information
from digitized historical maps, making these maps
substantially more useful to digital humanists and
other users. Grinnell’s share of the grant was awarded
through an NSF program that supports research at
undergraduate institutions and will support up to 14
student researchers. Weinman has a track record of
successful Mentored Advanced Projects due to his
efforts to improve student learning through research
experiences.
Winter 2015
13
Quote Board
Artists and Scholars
Photo by Justin Hayworth
Excerpt from a Q&A with Peter Coyote ’64
“White
Grinnell
College van
is sitting out
front, bass
thumping. It’s
good to have
the college
students back
in town.”
– Bikes to You, Twitter
The actor, writer, and countercultural icon talks about life, learning, and Zen
When Peter Coyote first came to Grinnell, he was
Robert Peter Cohon, a native of New York City, raised
in New Jersey, 19 going on 20. As a freshman, he was
one of the organizers of the “Gang of 14” who went to
Washington, D.C., to protest the nuclear arms race and
support John F. Kennedy’s proposed nuclear test-ban
treaty.
Coyote came to campus in October to speak and
give an acting workshop. Following is an excerpt from
his conversation with Elise Hadden ’14. See the full
Q&A at forum.grinnell.edu.
You came to Grinnell at a time when the College was
starting to admit more students from the East Coast.
What it was like for you here?
It’s hard to describe, because it was all new, and I didn’t
have anything to compare it to. I had a train ride out
here, and I had two suitcases, one of which was filled
with records with a record player strapped to it. I had
my guitar and one suitcase of clothes. And I met one of
my best friends on the train, Ken Schiff [’64], who’s a
novelist. I met Terry Bisson [’64] the first day of school.
He was whistling a John Coltrane tune while walking
14 The Grinnell Magazine
across the Quad, and I called out the title. Fifty-five
years later, we’re still friends!
It was very exciting, particularly because I wasn’t a
sports guy in high school, and I wasn’t necessarily one
of the cool guys. I was interested in a lot of political,
beatnik, and counterculture stuff. And I came to
Grinnell and had the same experience I had when I
went to Martha’s Vineyard, which is that I met a lot of
kids who were interested in the same things. They had
read the same books, they were thinking about the same
ideas. I had that heady experience of sitting down and
talking to people for six hours and finding out there
were other people seeing the world the way I was.
That experience carried over to faculty as well. I
made a lot of friends on the faculty that I stayed friends
with until they died. And because I was older than a lot
of the kids, the faculty really took me under their wing,
and I used to bartend their parties because they knew
I would keep my mouth shut [chuckles]. I got a sense of
the humanized faculty with their hair down, not from
the other side of the desk. I really came of age here. I
was supported, it was a safe environment to experiment,
and I had every tool that I needed to mature.
“Even the
innocent
claim of being
apolitical is,
in the end,
a ‘political’
stance.”
– Jan Gross, Seth Richards
Professor in Modern Languages
(senior faculty status), in “Whose
right to ‘be political’ — yours,
mine, ours, or theirs?” in the
Des Moines Register, Oct. 16, 2015
“Today in chem lab, we
tested to check if our
prof’s new ceramic mug
had lead in the glaze. It did
#applicationsofmymajor.”
– Gargi Magar ’16, Twitter
“Is something still considered
open to the public if a ticket
costs more than $1,000 per
person? #Journo questions.”
– Silvia Foster-Frau ’15, Twitter
“As a writer, I am constantly
collecting stories to use in my
work, which I then return to these
communities when I am doing
public artwork. I feel like I, myself,
am learning more about Iowa
with each project I do.”
– Molly Rideout ’10 on Talk of Iowa, Iowa Public Radio, Oct. 14, 2015
Winter 2015
15
Pioneers
Photo by Justin Hayworth
Twins Challenge School
and Conference Golf
Records in Their First Year
by Denton Ketels
V
16 The Grinnell Magazine
of the best coaches in the country,
they sharpened their skills against
national competition in the Indian
Golf Union (IGU), India’s
governing body for men’s and
women’s amateur golf.
All ages compete together in the
IGU, and the Sinhas say only about
10–15 women nationally comprised
their stiffest competition. Vrishali’s
highest IGU ranking was second,
and last year Vidushi finished
ninth. Courses in India generally
play about 400 yards longer, so the
shorter format here fits their style of
play perfectly.
“We don’t hit it long,” Vidushi
says. “We just hit it really straight.
We are both really accurate.”
“I never miss the fairway,”
Vrishali says. No braggadocio. Just
quiet self-assuredness. To be sure, a
serene temperament is key to their
success.
“Mentally, we are very calm
compared to most girls on the
course,” Vrishali says. “If you get
emotional, your game will be all over
the place and you won’t do well.”
The Sinhas’ goal is to compete
in Division III nationals. But
because the Midwest Conference
Alumna swims the English Channel seven
years after bad weather stalls her first attempt
by Denton Ketels
Finish 1-2 in conference tournament and
help rewrite record books for team
rishali Sinha ’19 and
Vidushi Sinha ’19 ruled
Midwest Conference golf
this fall.
The twins from Gurgaon,
Haryana, India, finished one-two at
the MWC tournament in October
and led Grinnell women’s golf to its
third consecutive conference title.
The Sinhas’ individual play
raised eyebrows from the season’s
start. In their very first competitive
rounds for Grinnell, Vrishali and
Vidushi shot the second and third
best scores in program history at 74
and 76, respectively.
Golfers since the age of 10,
the Sinhas started playing at their
home country club with their father.
Vrishali says, “I was so jealous that
my brother played with him every
day, so I started playing.” Vidushi
joined the family foursome a few
months later.
Vrishali was the first of the
two sisters to play competitively,
winning her first tournament by
27 strokes. According to the twins,
most women’s sports in India are
pursued outside of school, and the
Shri Ram School they attended
did not offer golf. Aided by one
Rematch with the
Strait of Dover
is on probation and there is no
automatic bid for winning the
team title, they will have to depend
on their individual end-of-season
stroke averages to qualify. Vrishali’s
is 75.2, Vidushi’s is 77.2. Last year, a
76 was needed.
What they might accomplish
in their Grinnell golf careers is for
others to speculate about. “Honestly,
I don’t want to look so far ahead,”
Vrishali says. “I just want to get
better every year and get more
accurate with my game.”
“I just want to play one game
at a time, one tournament at a time,
and just be consistent,” Vidushi
echoes.
Next summer the Sinhas will
return to India and stay sharp by
playing their home course every day.
After all, college golf is one thing,
but can they outshoot their brother?
“Yes,” they answer in unison.
“Our brother is really good,
too,” Vidushi says, “But, yeah, we
beat him.”
Delia Salomon ’14 started her
attempt to swim the English Channel
from Dover, England, in the dark
of night. At hour 10, she was “quite
shocked” to have France already in
sight.
“I tried not to be looking towards
France too much because that can
play tricks on your mind,” Salomon
says. “Once I realized how close I was,
it was really exciting.
“The finish line itself was stressful
because the wind picked up,” she says.
“I was trying to land on a rocky beach
and not get completely smashed.”
A month after completing the
most famous long-distance swim
in the world, Salomon recalled her
landing at Cap Griz Nez September 7.
“I felt a huge sense of relief,” she says.
“And also disbelief. It still feels like a
dream.”
Salomon made the 21-mile
crossing in 10 hours and 33 minutes
— faster than she had anticipated
thanks to favorable currents and
winds, she says.
It was her second try. She’d made
an attempt in 2008 when she was 16
years old but it was called off by bad
weather after 11 hours.
“I’d read the book Swimming to
Antarctica by Lynne Cox when I was
15 and decided I wanted to do it,”
Salomon says. “I guess I am just really
stubborn, so once I was thwarted by
the weather, I wanted a rematch. I
knew I had to finish it.”
Open water swimming appeals
to Salomon because there are so many
ways of defining success. “Sure, there
are some who have the records for the
fastest or the most or the first of some
crossing,” she says, “but it can be
more than that. I just wanted to get
across. I didn’t care how long it would
take.”
Salomon enlisted her own boat
pilot to guide her crossing. Pilots
typically are fishermen familiar with
the channel. They are in complete
charge: they choose the day of the
crossing and have final say on all
safety matters.
“The days leading up to the swim
are nerve wracking,” Salomon says.
“You have to be ready to go whenever
your pilot says.”
An observer from the Channel
Swimming Association made sure that
official rules were followed. Salomon
was not allowed contact with anyone
in the boat during timeouts. At
30-minute intervals she drank a
“carb-protein-electrolyte mixture” of
her own concoction. She managed to
avoid two of the biggest challenges
in the channel — jellyfish and tanker
ships.
Salomon trained a full year
for the crossing, getting help with
open water technique from Tim
Hammond, Grinnell assistant
swimming and diving coach, the
summer after graduation. She sought
to be mentally and emotionally fit for
the challenge, staying motivated with
the support of family, friends, and
coaches.
“I’ve been working for years
to learn how to deal with negative
thoughts because I was so hard on
myself after not finishing my first
channel swim,” Salomon says. She
credits Erin Hurley, head swimming
and diving coach, for helping her
overcome negativity when she was a
student.
“During the swim there were
very few times when I was feeling
down or negative,” Salomon says. “I
really felt like I was focused and in the
moment.”
The second day after her crossing,
Salomon got back in the water. After
three days, she felt “pretty normal”
except for being scratched up from
landing among the rocks.
“Before this I never thought
that highly of my capabilities to
accomplish difficult things,” Salomon
says. “I don’t know that I did this to
prove to myself that I could, but in
the end I was like, yeah okay, you can
do stuff like this if you want to.”
Winter 2015
17
Then and Now
Photo by Justin Hayworth
It’s beginning
to look a lot
like winter
1976 vs. 2015
Photo courtesy of Burling Library Archives, Grinnell College
18 The Grinnell Magazine
How the Grinnell Prize
embeds global innovation
in campus culture
by Elise Hadden ’14
G
rinnell’s dedication to educating individuals
“who are prepared in life and work to use
their knowledge and their abilities to serve
the common good,” as stated in the College’s
mission statement, is perhaps nowhere demonstrated
so strongly as in the recognition of global innovators
through the Grinnell College Innovators for Social
Justice Prize.
Awarding $100,000 each to two winners annually,
the prize establishes close, long-term relationships with
social entrepreneurs and their organizations. And in the
five years since its inception, it has done much more.
“Our real goal is not only to honor people doing
meaningful and impactful work in the world, but also to
provide resources and motivation to the next generation
of social innovators,” says Saunia Powell ’02, most recent
coordinator of the Grinnell Prize. “We’re expanding the
networks available to students, faculty, staff, and alumni
to include people who are doing cutting-edge, innovative
work.”
Now celebrating its fifth anniversary, the Grinnell Prize has begun to highlight an important new trend in social entrepreneurship — a focus on sustainability.
“More and more we’re seeing people evolve away from the idea of just doing good,” says President Raynard S. Kington. “These winners, along with others before
them, are doing good in a way that is independently
sustainable, creating models that will continue to have an
impact even if they don’t get grant funding.”
Deborah Ahenkorah, 2015 Grinnell Prize winner,
has developed a book publishing company as a part of
Photo by Justin Hayworth
Social Justice: From Theory
to Practice
her organization, Golden Baobob, creating a regular
source of income to fund her project of supporting
emerging African illustrators and writers through
training, workshops, and prizes. Maria Vertkin, also a
prizewinner this year, has developed her organization,
Found in Translation, which trains disadvantaged,
bilingual women to be translators, into a viable business.
By hiring the women she’s trained and then contracting
with other organizations for translating services,
Vertkin’s model safeguards the success of her project.
This kind of long-term, innovative thinking in the field
of social justice is an important hallmark of the Grinnell
Prize.
An influential investment
When Melisa Chan was hired in January 2011 as the
first coordinator of the Grinnell Prize, she had some
significant challenges facing her. Although the prize
project had been announced the previous fall, there was
no formal process to narrow the 1,200 nominations
to just two or three winners. In addition, there was an
unexpectedly negative backlash against the prize.
“One of the biggest challenges we faced was
credibility. Many people wondered why Grinnell
was spending so much money on a prize that goes to
individuals and organizations that may not be affiliated
with the College,” says Chan. At the time, critics lacked
tangible evidence of the prize’s benefit to the campus
community.
By involving large groups of students, faculty,
staff, and alumni to help sift through nominations and
spearhead the selection process, Chan was able to turn
most of those critics into supporters.
But it wasn’t until the winners began coming to
campus and developing their partnerships with the
College that the true benefits of the Grinnell Prize
became clear. Winners met with student groups to
answer questions and provide advice, gave presentations
on their work, and established student internships and
staff fellowships for the College community. Some
winners even returned to give presentations in classes or
to teach short courses.
Kevin Jennison ’12 recalls his interactions with
2011 winners Eric Glustrom and Boris Bulayev, who
founded the nonprofit organization Educate!. The
organization provides training in social entrepreneurship
and mentorship to African youth to empower them to
create solutions to poverty, disease, crime, and other
issues of international importance.
At the time, Jennison was in the early stages of
founding his own nonprofit, Tab for a Cause, which has
Deborah Ahenkorah at the 2015
Grinnell Prize ceremony
20 The Grinnell Magazine
Winter 2015
21
Photo by Justin Hayworth
Maria Vertkin, 2015 Grinnell Prize winner
now raised more than $170,000 for charity. “One piece
of memorable advice they gave me was not to get caught
up in short-term successes until they become long-term,”
Jennison said. “The meeting also led to an excellent
partnership between Educate! and Tab for a Cause; we’re
very proud to support them.”
The positive impact of the Grinnell Prize also
extends to the student interns who participate in the
selection process each year, doing in-depth research on
the finalists and presenting that research to the selection
committee. Students not only hone their analytical and
public speaking skills, they also learn about inspiring
projects around the world.
“You get to see these amazing people and how their
personal and social lives have grown around their career,”
recalls Kenneth Wee ’16, who interned for the Grinnell
Prize in spring 2015. “The money that we’re willing to
give them suddenly opens up massive possibilities that
they wouldn’t have been able to accomplish otherwise.”
When an innovator wins the Grinnell Prize,
a mutually beneficial and rewarding relationship is
initiated, and the value of social justice and global
responsibility is embedded even further into Grinnell’s
culture.
Building a better future
One of the first prizewinners was James Kofi Annan,
who received the prize in 2011 for the work he’s done
with his organization, Challenging Heights, which
seeks to end child slavery in Ghana. Since winning the
Grinnell Prize, Challenging Heights has been able to
22 The Grinnell Magazine
employ a larger staff, build a shelter for children rescued
from slavery, establish a sports program, and build a
library. It has also expanded its efforts to work with
families in villages to combat poverty and end the cycle
of slavery. Annan used his personal share of the prize
to establish a large restaurant that generates additional
revenue to support the organization when grant funding
falls short. As of this year, Challenging Heights has
rescued more than 1,200 children from slavery.
Challenging Heights has maintained a strong
connection with Grinnell through many student
internships. One of those interns, Opeyemi Awe ’15,
credits her experience in Ghana with the discovery of
her passion for development work. “When I came to
Grinnell, I was a chemistry major, and then I went to
Ghana and I didn’t think about chemistry a single time,”
Awe says. “I did think about governance, about politics,
and how to lift people out of poverty.” Upon returning
to Grinnell, she declared an independent major in
international affairs.
Awe says her internship saved her a lot of time after
graduation. Learning about the day-to-day realities of
nonprofit work helped her to identify early on that it
wasn’t the path for her. Instead, she wanted to focus
on the role of policy in development. The recipient of a
2015 Watson Fellowship, she is now traveling the world
to understand how social entrepreneurship can address
development issues.
“Our relationship with Grinnell has been very
positive,” says Annan. “What we would love to see,
moving forward, is more alumni getting involved.”
Changing lives through journalism
Another prizewinner who has continued a symbiotic
relationship with the College is Cristi Hegranes, a 2012
prizewinner. Her organization, Global Press Institute
(GPI), provides training-to-employment opportunities
in journalism for young women around the world,
opening an avenue for local people to report their own
news to national and international audiences. Several of
these reporters have come from backgrounds of extreme
poverty and have gone on to win prestigious awards for
their writing and investigative skills.
Two Grinnell students interned with GPI in 2013
and found themselves immersed in a challenging yet
extremely rewarding experience.
“Working at the Global Press Institute definitely
impacted my outlook,” says Mariam Asaad ’14. “I
developed a much more nuanced sense of how important
it is to seek out authentic voices instead of imposing our
understandings onto different people, communities, and
cultures.”
This knowledge has served her well in her life after
Grinnell. Working as a Teach for Pakistan Fellow, Asaad
is able to respect the differences between herself and her
students and to incorporate those varying perspectives
into the classroom.
Elena Gartner ’14 heard Hegranes’ presentation
during the 2012 prize week and was immediately
inspired to get involved. The Global Press Institute
combined her interests in anthropology, media, and
nonprofit programming in a way that affected the path
she took at Grinnell and beyond.
“GPI’s empathy-based storytelling approach
to journalism made me more curious about
interdisciplinary approaches to creating social change
and inspired me to think outside the box about
development,” Gartner says. Now working for the
nonprofit JUMP! Foundation in Bangkok, Gartner says
that many people she encounters in Southeast Asia have
only heard of Grinnell through their knowledge of the
Grinnell Prize.
“This prize will continue to set Grinnell apart from
other educational institutions as a learning environment
that invests in the future,” says Gartner.
Since 2012, GPI has continued to train and employ
female journalists around the world, and has also
established itself as a legitimate news service, supporting
the enduring feasibility of the project.
Students like Awe, Asaad, and Gartner, along
with many others, will continue to be inspired by the
prizewinners to undertake their own global endeavors
and to leave their marks on the world in their service to
“the common good.”
2015 Prize Paintings
Golden Baobab,
oil on board, 11 x
8.5 inches
Engaging young
readers through
culturally relevant
literature is at
the heart of
Golden Baobab’s
mission. It’s
important to see
yourself reflected
in your reading,
especially when
you are just
starting to read.
This painting
represents
children’s books written for Africans by Africans. The pen,
pencil, and brush represent the authors and illustrators
that Golden Baobab supports through competitions, prizes,
publishing, and distribution of books. The books are painted
to look well-worn and well-used — beloved tales that open
a world of imagination and learning to Africa’s children.
Found in
Translation, oil
on board, 11 x 8.5
inches
For people who
do not speak
English and
are in medical
crisis, having a
trained medical
interpreter can
be a matter of life
and death. Found
in Translation
helps bilingual
and homeless
women secure
meaningful jobs
by providing training for medical interpretation certificates
and helping with job placements. This painting is about
pairing multiple needs. Medical intervention is represented
by the stethoscope and blood pressure gauge. The keys
represent the stability of an income that provide keys to
a home and other opportunities to bilingual and formerly
homeless women. Interpretation is represented by the
different alphabets and language systems, painted in red to
represent medical crisis. – Tilly Woodward, painter
Winter 2015
23
Photo courtesy of Burling Library Archives, Grinnell College
The Iowa Caucuses Grinnell College’s tradition of activism
intertwines with Iowa’s heavy impact
on presidential campaigns
U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., spoke at Darby Gym in 1979 when he
challenged President Carter for the Democratic nomination.
by Carroll McKibbin ’60
W
hile Grinnell College has a long and
intentional history of encouraging
participation and advocacy on public
issues, the national significance of Iowa’s
political party caucuses is relatively recent and quite
accidental.
Grinnell’s involvement with public policy is as
old as the College, dating back to abolitionist activities
in the 1850s. The struggle against slavery developed
into a tradition that continues to this day, having
progressed through the Social Gospel Movement
following the Civil War, the Progressive Era into the
early 20th century, and the New Deal of the 1930s. In
the latter instance, a number of Grinnellians served
with distinction, including Chester Davis 1911 on the
board of governors of the Federal Reserve, Florence
24 The Grinnell Magazine
Kerr 1912, a Works Progress Administration executive,
and Harry Hopkins 1912, a close adviser to President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and a major architect of the New
Deal’s many administrative and legislative measures.
During the 1960s, Grinnell’s Program for Practical
Political Education (PPPE) flourished, sponsoring
elaborate mock political conventions in Darby Gym and
bringing to campus a long list of luminaries, including
former Presidents Truman and Eisenhower. However,
the loss of foundation funding, the disruptions of the
Vietnam War, and the reduction of the voting age to 18
via the 26th Amendment in 1971 caused both resources
and motivation for the PPPE to dwindle. Many
students, no longer restricted to mock political activities,
took advantage of their new opportunity and became
directly involved in politics of real consequence.
Iowa’s caucus
The Iowa political party caucus system, like the
Grinnell tradition of public policy involvement, dates
back to the mid-19th century when statehood was
attained in 1846. The precinct caucuses continued
through the years, lightly attended and little noticed
beyond the state until 1972. In that year, the national
Democratic Party established new rules to democratize
its presidential nomination process. Those changes, plus
state party regulations requiring at least 30 days between
consecutive meetings at the precinct, county, district, and
state levels, pushed each of those sessions backward until
January 24 became the latest possible date for the Iowa
Democratic precinct caucuses.
New Hampshire, traditionally the first state to
hold a presidential primary, had already scheduled its
1972 elections for March 7, six weeks after the Iowa
date. Precinct caucuses, only the first of four steps in
choosing delegates to a national convention where a
nominee for president is selected, seemed innocuous.
New Hampshire took little notice and did not contest
the earlier date of the Iowa event.
However, the national media, always eager for news
on a presidential race, responded quickly when U.S. Sen.
George McGovern, D-S.D., did surprisingly well in the
Iowa caucus, placing second behind supposed frontrunner U.S. Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Maine. When
McGovern went on to win the Democratic nomination,
the stage was set for the Iowa caucus to become of great
significance in subsequent presidential elections.
Iowa’s rise to prominence
The national importance of the Iowa Democratic
Party’s precinct caucus caught the attention of
their Republican opponents. Starting in 1976, the
Republicans would thereafter hold their caucus on the
same day as the Democrats, adding to Iowa’s impact on
the selection of presidents.
A little known governor of Georgia named Jimmy
Carter also recognized the growing potential of the Iowa
caucus. With the White House in mind and his term
of office completed, Carter commenced his presidential
campaign in Iowa nearly a year before the 1976 precinct
caucuses.
Winter 2015
25
26 The Grinnell Magazine
the same at Grinnell College. You have to get used to
losing a lot, and that toughened my hide.”
Edwards has kind words for Grinnell professors
who didn’t always share his group’s political views: “They
admired our pluck and treated us fairly.”
Edwards stayed in Iowa after graduating in
1980 to run for the state House of Representatives.
Unfortunately, he again learned the trials of losing. If he
had won, he might still live in Iowa, something he says,
“I wouldn’t mind at all.”
Jack Dane with shoulder-length hair and wearing cutoff
jeans. “Anyone who watched the convention had to
wonder who the hell I was and what I was doing there,”
recalls Dane, now an attorney in Davenport, Iowa.
Four decades later, Weindruch reflects on those
days: “My experience as president of the Grinnell
College Republicans and grass-roots involvement in
Iowa county and state politics had a profound impact
on me — only to be fully understood in hindsight many
years later. I would describe it as the equivalent of a
political ‘post-traumatic shock syndrome.’”
Strickler’s recollections on his Grinnell experience
mirror the College’s traditional mission. “What I
got out of this experience was the opportunity to
discuss and argue political issues, to learn that political
involvement is rewarding and enriching of one’s life,
and to understand multiple perspectives on issues. I
came to appreciate a variety of viewpoints and gained
understanding on how people can disagree on issues.”
Edwards, another of the Weindruch group,
was raised in New Jersey, where Democrats greatly
outnumber Republicans. “We Republicans had to hustle
hard in New Jersey,” Edwards remembers. “I found much
Gatekeeper to the White House
Photo courtesy of Burling Library Archives, Grinnell College
Carter’s grassroots campaign across Iowa featured
hundreds of personal appearances, including one at
the Grinnell College Forum, and tens of thousands of
handshakes. His standard introduction, “I’m Jimmy
Carter and I’m going to be the next president of the
United States,” was planted in the ears of thousands of
Iowans.
Jimmy Carter’s lengthy person-to-person campaign
in Iowa proved to be successful when he won 28 percent
of the Iowa Democratic caucus vote, more than double
that of U.S. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., and thereby
moved from obscurity to a front-runner status. One year
after the Iowa caucus of 1976, Carter became the 39th
president of the United States.
The Republican campaign of 1976 added additional
drama in the race for the White House when Ronald
Reagan, the former governor of California, challenged
incumbent President Gerald Ford for the party
nomination. Several Grinnellians entered the fray.
Bruce Weindruch ’78 and colleagues Jim
Strickler ’78, Gregg Edwards ’80, and Jack Dane ’79
participated in the Republican caucus and supported
Ford’s nomination. They also raised the issues of
decriminalization of marijuana and divestment in South
Africa. While Ford later won the party nomination,
Weindruch and his partners had little luck at the caucus
with their issue priorities.
“Policy discussions were dominated by the ‘right­
to-life’ issue in the aftermath of the 1973 Roe v. Wade
decision,” Weindruch remembers. Reagan supporters
came from out of state and pushed hard on that issue.
It became a litmus test, a kind of ‘Are you with us or
against us?’ sort of thing.”
Dane, in his freshman year at Grinnell, attended a
precinct caucus in the living room of his parents’ farm
home outside Iowa City. Four people attended: Jack, his
mother, his father, and his sister. Jack was elected to the
county convention by — no surprise — a unanimous
vote.
From that beginning, Dane participated in the
district and state party meetings, and later attended the
Republican national convention in Kansas City as an
invited, college-age activist. On the convention floor
he carried a sign reading “Grinnell, Iowa, loves Jerry
and Bob.” Dane originally had in mind Gerald Ford,
the incumbent president, and Bob Ray, the governor of
Iowa. In the meantime, however, the convention had
selected U.S. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., as Ford’s vice
presidential running mate. Thus, the sign made sense in
any case.
Network television cameras picked up the young
U.S. Rep. John Anderson, R-Ill., spoke at Herrick Chapel in
February 1979, a few months before declaring his candidacy
for president. He ultimately ran as an independent.
The McGovern campaign in 1972 revealed the potential
of the Iowa caucus in the presidential race, and Carter
proved four years later the Iowa caucus could serve
as a launch pad to the presidency. The lessons learned
from those two campaigns were not lost on presidential
candidates or the media as the 1980 presidential
selection cycle began, a year when Iowa would become
nationally recognized as the gatekeeper on the road to
the White House.
All three major television networks established
temporary studios in Des Moines in 1980. On Jan. 21,
the evening of the caucus, the three news anchors —
Walter Cronkite (CBS), John Chancellor (NBC), and
Frank Reynolds (ABC) — journeyed to Iowa’s capital
city to originate their evening news programs. Iowa, for
the first time, surpassed New Hampshire for presidential
campaign news stories.
Also in 1980, the Iowa Republican Party added a
new feature to the presidential campaign that attracted
even more media attention, a straw poll conducted five
months prior to the caucus. Held on the Iowa State
University campus in an atmosphere of half-carnival and
half-convention, nine Republican candidates sought to
get a jump on the party nomination. “The action begins
in Iowa,” George H.W. Bush, winner of the straw poll,
proclaimed with exuberance.
Bush followed his victory in Ames with the Carter
strategy of “retail politics,” meeting face-to-face with
as many voters as possible. He made dozens of stops
across Iowa, including one in Grinnell where he was
accompanied by his then-young sons, George, who
would be elected president in 2000; and Jeb, who aspires
to the same outcome in 2016.
Reagan, the Republican front-runner, largely
bypassed the Iowa caucus, making only one stop in the
state to deliver a quick speech at the Des Moines airport.
When he lost to Bush, a lesson was learned by all
presidential candidates: Pay attention to Iowa!
Reagan later won the Republican nomination for
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., spoke at the Forum
Nov. 16, 2003, during the 2004 campaign.
president, but his erstwhile opponent had made his
mark in the Hawkeye State. Bush became Reagan’s vice
president and later succeeded him in the Oval Office.
President Carter was challenged in the 1980
Democratic caucus by U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass.,
whose many visits to the state included speaking to a
packed house in Darby Gym. Carter trounced Kennedy,
59 percent to 29 percent, in the caucus vote. The senator
from Massachusetts continued his campaign, but never
recovered from that devastating defeat.
Iowa’s presidential caucuses, now fully recognized
as important national events, inspired greater local
participation. In 1976, the Republican precinct caucus
for the West Lucas Township of Johnson County
attracted only Jack Dane and his family. Four years later,
nearly 100 people crammed into the Danes’ living room
to caucus.
The 2016 election approaches
While Grinnell’s tradition of equipping students to
participate in public policy issues is firmly established,
Iowa’s key role in presidential elections, although widely
accepted, is still evolving.
States still jockey for position and influence in
the selection of presidents, a century after presidential
primaries were first established. Over the years,
New Hampshire became accepted by other states,
begrudgingly, as the lead-off primary. And then Iowa
innocently slipped under the radar with its precinct
caucuses that were knighted by the media into national
prominence.
U.S. Rep. Tom Cole ’71, R-Okla., has a high regard
for the Iowa caucus system, except for the Republican
straw poll, calling it “stacked and packed” and “one of the
worst inventions ever.” The poll lost much of its luster
during the 2012 campaign when U.S. Rep. Michele
Bachmann, R-Minn., won that event but placed only
sixth in the caucus five months later and dropped out
of the race. The last straw for the straw poll came when
Winter 2015
27
several high profile candidates in 2015 decided not to participate. The
cancellation did not disappoint Cole.
Cole acknowledges the Iowa caucus is “very important” and “the first
real test in the presidential race,” and calls the state’s voters “a sophisticated
electorate.” The congressman says there is “some resentment” in Washington
over Iowa’s special role in presidential elections, but he is comfortable with it,
saying that Iowa, unlike many states, is politically competitive.
As the 2016 presidential election approaches, the significance of Iowa is
very much in evidence. The day after announcing her bid for the presidency
in the spring of 2015, Hillary Clinton headed for Iowa. The first official
event in her campaign was not held in the ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria
in New York City, but in an auto tech classroom in Monticello, Iowa.
At last count nearly two dozen declared candidates for the presidency
are appearing all over Iowa. Whether it’s Donald Trump addressing a
crowd in Winterset in front of a mural of John Wayne; U.S. Sen. Bernie
Sanders, I-Vt., schmoozing with patrons of the Better Day Café in Storm
Lake; or U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, appearing at the “Field of Dreams” in
Dyersville, they all come to Iowa.
The participation of Grinnellians in the 2016 presidential selection
process is an absolute certainty. A tradition that started in the 19th century
battling the evils of slavery in the abolitionist movement continues into the
21st with the confrontation of environmental and other issues. The Iowa
caucuses will be held Feb. 1, 2016. Grinnellians will be there, continuing a
legacy of seeking solutions to the major public policy issues of our time.
28 The Grinnell Magazine
Grinnell College continues
its tradition of preparing
students for a lifetime of
civic engagement through
the Rosenfield Program in
Public Affairs, International
Relations, and Human Rights.
Created in 1979 with a milliondollar endowment honoring
longtime Grinnell trustee
Joseph Rosenfield ’25, this
series of lectures and symposia
features noted practitioners
and academics. The program
director, Sarah Purcell ’92,
professor of history, states
the purpose of the Rosenfield
Program succinctly: “We bring
the world to campus.”
The Rosenfield Program
for 2015–16 will again promote
the Grinnell legacy in public
affairs with a long list of
presentations, including a
lecture by Akhil Reed Amar
of Yale University Law School
on Constitutional issues, a
conference on “Campaign
Finance Reform,” plus a spring
break tour to Washington,
D.C., that allows students to
observe policymaking processes
firsthand.
Participants and
Practitioners in Politics
As John Bohman ’06 prepared for the second semester
of his sophomore year, U.S. Rep. Tom Cole ’71, R-Okla.,
was being sworn into Congress. Though both are
now proud alumni of Grinnell College, their motives
for enrolling and interest in politics are opposites in
sequence. Bohman, a Washington, D.C.-area native
who became the president of the Student Government
Association, was attracted by “Grinnell’s commitment to
social justice and tradition of activism” but is no longer
directly involved in politics. Cole came to Grinnell “to
study history and play football.” He is now serving his
seventh term in Congress.
Bohman attended the 2004 Democratic caucus and
canvassed the city of Grinnell as an organizer for the
U.S. Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., campaign. He recalls
being invited into the home of an exceptionally friendly,
elderly lady. “I’m so happy to see you,” she gushed.
“Please sit down and stay for a while. I’ll fix you a cup of
coffee.”
Bohman knew Iowans were friendly, but this kind
lady exceeded all expectations.
When she leaned forward to hand Bohman a cup
of coffee she lurched back in surprise. “You’re not my
grandson!” she exclaimed.
“Sorry to disappoint you, ma’am,” he responded.
“I’m here to ask you to support John Edwards for
president.”
“Well, I don’t know about that,” the grey-haired
lady replied. “I haven’t met him yet.”
Bohman has fond memories of those earlier
experiences. “The Iowa caucus is democracy in its most
basic form.”
Cole, now a member of the House Republican
leadership as deputy majority whip, didn’t attend
Grinnell College with a political career in mind.
Although raised in an Oklahoma family where his
parents were politically active — his mother served
in the state legislature — Cole’s interest in politics
developed after he graduated.
Cole learned of Grinnell from a cousin who told
him of the school’s fine reputation. Thus encouraged,
he sent an application to the admission office and
mentioned under “extra-curricular activities” that he
earned all-conference honors as a lineman for the Moore
High School football team.
John Pfitsch, Grinnell’s venerable coach,
telephoned Cole and encouraged him to enroll.
Photo by Justin Hayworth
Photo by Justin Hayworth
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke in the Harris Center on November 3, 2015.
Rosenfield
Program
in Public
Affairs
U.S. Rep. Tom Cole ’71, R-Okla., in his Washington, D.C., office
“I’m not sure I’m good enough to play college ball,”
Cole responded.
“Son, if you’re all-conference anywhere in
Oklahoma, you can play for Grinnell,” Pfitsch replied.
And that he did, helping the Pioneers post winning
seasons during his junior and senior years.
Cole’s success in football was accompanied by
an avid interest in history. “I had wonderful history
professors at Grinnell,” Cole remembers, citing D.A.
Smith as an example.
Along with football and history, Cole added a third
interest at Grinnell: Ellen Decker ’70. On the day of his
graduation, they were married in Herrick Chapel.
Most Grinnell students experience only one
presidential cycle while in college. Faculty and staff, in
contrast, are more permanent and have opportunities
for participation over a longer period. Kevin Crim,
who became interested in politics as a young boy in
Indiana when he shook hands with a campaigning
John Kennedy, has been a Writing Lab assistant since
1972. During that time he has chaired the Poweshiek
County Democratic Central Committee and served
on the party’s state platform committee. In 1984, Crim
presided over Grinnell’s First Ward caucus; the First
Ward includes the College campus. The 700 attendees
comprised the largest caucus in the state.
Smith, now professor emeritus, has attended the
First Ward caucus since 1972 and frequently chaired it.
He strongly supports the system: “The caucuses bring
people together, enable them to discuss issues, and
generally think of themselves as participants in a great
civic enterprise.”
Among the many party positions Smith has held,
the most memorable is serving as an official presidential
elector. In December of 1992 he journeyed to Iowa’s
state capital in Des Moines as one of 370 electors in
the nation who officially made Arkansas Gov. William
Jefferson Clinton the 42nd president of the United
States. Smith relishes that experience, calling it “one of
the great moments of my life.”
– Carroll McKibbin ’60
Winter 2015
29
Time, Talent, Treasure, Ties
Lindsay Ayling ’10 and Caitlin
Faces of Philanthropy Fuller ’11 participated in the 2008
caucus. Ayling calls it “one of the
most rewarding experiences of my
life.” Fuller cut short her Christmas
Bill Holland ’00 and Matt Ewing ’02 traveled around Iowa during
vacation in California to attend.
the 2000 presidential campaign drawing attention to climate change
She and other students who had
problems via a 20-foot inflatable ear of corn with a sign: “Drought
done likewise slept on the floor of
kills corn.” When journalists showed an interest in the enterprising
the Physical Education Complex
pair, they held press conferences to voice their opinions. Even NBC
because the dormitories were
responded, giving Holland a spot on its evening television news.
closed over the holidays.
Fourth of a Four-Part Series:
Alumni Invest in the Future
by Denton Ketels
Gifts of treasure are rarely about just money. They’re about serving future generations.
David Karol ’92 attended the 1988
caucus. “The caucus was exciting
and reinforced my interest in
am more suited to be an observer
and analyst than an activist.” Now
a political science professor at the
University of Maryland, Karol is co­
author of a book about presidential
Photo by Justin Hayworth
politics, but I gradually realized I
selection, The Party Decides:
Presidential Nominations Before and
After Reform.
Grant Woodard ’06 attended a 2004 Democratic precinct caucus in
his hometown of Stratford, Iowa. That starting point eventually led to
his election as president of the College Democrats of America. In that
position he served ex officio on the National Democratic Committee,
then chaired by Howard Dean, a former governor of Vermont and
a 2004 candidate for president. Grant reminisces of his Grinnell
experience: “It was fun to see candidates (for president) come to
campus. Few college students have that opportunity.”
30 The Grinnell Magazine
Linda Sherry Kocher ’84 and Erik Kocher ’84
in the Joe Rosenfield ’25 Center
Winter 2015
31
“It’s exciting that students who
may not have been introduced to
classic literature before they came
to college can still participate
actively and make up some ground
”
necessary for meaningful courses.
The value of studying classics
Grinnell College trustee M. Anne Campbell Spence ’66
made a career for herself as a research geneticist, teacher,
and higher education administrator. But it was Spence’s
rediscovery of classic literature 50 years after her first
exposure to it at Grinnell that inspired her to help
students grasp its historical relevance in today’s world.
Last spring, Spence established the Elson-McGinty
Fund in Classics. Named for two high school teachers
that Spence credits with instilling in her a desire for
lifelong learning, the fund expands interdisciplinary
team-teaching and learning opportunities for students
and faculty in the College’s Department of Classics.
It also provides summer fellowships for students
who decide midstream in their college careers that
knowledge of classical mythology or the speeches of
Cicero will enhance their academic and career goals.
“It’s exciting that students who may not have been
introduced to classic literature before they came to
college can still participate actively and make up some
ground necessary for meaningful courses,” Spence says.
Ella Nicolson ’18 is an example of how students
are using the new classics track. Having already taken
300-level Latin, Nicolson studied Greek last summer in
order to accelerate her work on a classics major while she
also pursues a major in economics.
“The support that the classics department has
given me to follow my dreams and goals reaffirms that
Grinnell is the right place for me,” Nicolson says. “It’s
something I would not have imagined myself doing
before coming here.”
The Elson-McGinty Fund in Classics is one part
of a gift that also supports major expansion of Alumni
Recitation Hall and Carnegie Hall into a new center
for the humanities and social studies. Spence says the
space will allow new teaching methods and technologies
32 The Grinnell Magazine
to accommodate a wider range of learning styles and
accelerate students’ grasp of the classics early in their
lives.
Spence, who majored in history in addition to
biology, says her Grinnell education explains why
a person of science would turn her philanthropic
attention to students’ understanding of Socrates or the
Peloponnesian Wars. “When you have a liberal arts
background, you are much more open to seeing these
things as opportunities,” Spence says.
Helping international students
experience Grinnell
Growing up in India, Saumil Parikh ’99 benefited
from his father’s determination and foresight. Harish
Parikh worked and saved to ensure that his sons could
be educated in the United States. As he researched
U.S. private liberal arts colleges, Saumil Parikh says he
was struck by the lack of scholarship opportunities for
international students.
Now, having created a scholarship fund to honor
his father as well as his friend and mentor Paul
McCulley ’79, Parikh enjoys seeing the outcomes
created by the Parikh/
McCulley scholarship. It
is a fully funded fouryear opportunity for an
international student who
could not otherwise attend
Grinnell.
Iulia Iordache ’15 was the first recipient of the
scholarship. A native of Romania, she is currently a
Grinnell College English Teaching Fellow at Payap
University in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
“Going out into the world has strengthened my
belief that this scholarship is the most important thing
that ever happened to me,” says Iordache. “Because of
Saumil’s gift to Grinnell, I had more chances to explore,
to be involved in campus activities as a student leader,
and to discover my passion for Southeast Asia, which
brought me to Thailand today.”
Iordache’s gratitude mirrors Parikh’s sentiment
about Paul McCulley. McCulley helped him secure a
student internship with a Wall Street bank. The ensuing
professional partnership with McCulley helped forge
Parikh’s ideas about giving back.
“Paul’s relationship with me is something I regard as
ideal, and something I would like to see more of between
current Grinnell students and alums,” Parikh says. “It’s
important for Grinnell alumni to reach back to current
students and to promote their interests in whatever field
it may be.”
Parikh says it is also important that the scholarship
contributes to diversity by serving students from
regions not otherwise well represented on campus. “The
scholarship recipient this year (Rojina Sharma ’19) is a
survivor of the Nepal earthquake,” Parikh says.
Investing in the College’s evolution
Ron Sandler ’62 acquired a lifelong orientation to
philanthropy when he was still a student at Grinnell. “I
read two or three books by a physician named Thomas
Dooley,” Sandler says. “He wrote about treating patients
in Laos. The satisfaction he got out of his work came
through very dramatically, and it kind of lit a fire in me.”
Also inspired by Albert Schweitzer’s efforts in
underdeveloped countries, Sandler spent summer
medical school internships at a mission hospital in La
Paz, Bolivia, and later returned there as a Peace Corps
physician.
Sandler’s career as an orthopedic surgeon was
punctuated by 24 trips to 14 different countries over
a 30-year span, including five trips to a region of the
Amazon with “the highest concentration of children
with club-feet that I’ve ever witnessed.”
“I was able to live the feeling that Tom Dooley
conveyed in his writings,” Sandler says, “and it was
always very rewarding.”
Sandler and his wife Rita have given generously to
Grinnell through a series of planned gifts, including in
2015 a unitrust, which creates a stream of income that
ultimately benefits the College in the future. He says he
“enjoys seeing how the College has evolved” since he was
a student and an athlete at Grinnell.
“I got a great education,” Sandler says. “It prepared
me very well for my medical school rigors. In fact, I
found medical school easier than Grinnell was, so from
an academic point it was excellent.”
A College trustee since 1983, Sandler says he
likes interacting with so many alumni of different
backgrounds. “The dynamism that I’m witnessing now
under President [Raynard S.] Kington’s tutelage is very
impressive,” he adds. “The College is making some very
great strides, and I think it will accelerate over the years.”
A positive habit starts early
Erik Kocher ’84 and Linda Sherry Kocher ’84 are living
proof that giving back is a habit of successful people.
They seized the opportunity to teach a quick course in
Philanthropy 101 while accompanying daughter Audrey
Kocher ’19 to New Student Orientation this fall.
“We had just bought bed risers at a sale on campus,”
Linda recounts. “All I had was a 20, and the young
woman at the sale said ‘It’s only 2 dollars; don’t you
have 2 dollars?’ I told her I’d used up all my ones and
asked who was getting the sale proceeds. She said ‘the
environmental club.’ I said, well, I’m an alum, keep the
20.
“She was shocked!” Linda laughs. “But that’s the way
it works!”
The Kochers feel strongly that real-life examples
help students grasp the need for philanthropy directed
toward the College. “We think that culture needs to
be fostered when young people first come on campus,”
Linda Kocher says.
“It’s difficult for that age group to look to the future
and see it,” says Erik Kocher, “but going to Grinnell is
more than just going to college. This is a relationship that
can grow and give back for your entire life.”
Class fund directors since 1997, the Kochers devote
a lot of time and effort each year creating handwritten,
personalized thank-you notes to donors. They are strong
Winter 2015
33
Giving
proponents of targeted giving and enthusiastically favor both need- and
merit-based financial aid with their own gifts to Grinnell.
“Erik had tuition remission (his father taught at Coe College), and
Grinnell helped me come up with additional aid so I could stay my senior
year,” Linda Kocher says. “We know what it’s like to pay student loans, and
we know what it’s like for other people to extend help.
“Now we’re in a position where we can turn around and give back.
And we hope at the same time that we’re modeling for others — for
younger people like our own children and for other alums.”
Providing good stewardship
John Hinde ’75 knows about money, how hard it is to accumulate,
and what it can accomplish. “I spent most of my career in the
trust business — trust and estates, “ Hinde says. “I think giving
isn’t a financial investment. It’s really more than that. It’s a gift of
the sacrifices and creativity that earned the money.”
Hinde set up an estate gift to Grinnell that will fund two
endowed chairs in the names of his parents, John W. Hinde and
Helen Patterson Hinde. His parents inspired their son’s interest
in political science and history, the areas to which his gift is
currently designated.
“Endowed chairs support the crucial work done by an outstanding
faculty of world-class scholars who love to teach,” says Mike Latham, dean
of the College. “They also allow us to secure the quality of that experience
for generations of students to come.”
“I’m viewing this as stewardship of the family’s working lives,” Hinde
says. “I don’t have heirs, and I did reasonably well in my career and was left
funds from my parents and my grandparents.
“I’m doing it as much for them as for the College and myself,” he
says, “and to ensure that their efforts will continue to yield benefits going
forward.”
Hinde says his Grinnell education provided the tools necessary for
law school and a career in the “intellectual disciplines” of law and finance.
A supporter of the 1972 McGovern campaign, he says life experience has
given him a “more conservative and libertarian” viewpoint.
“There’s nothing wrong with being to the left,” he jokes, “especially
when you’re young. But I’m a little surprised that decades of life
haven’t given some a greater appreciation of the danger of unintended
consequences, as well as an appreciation that most risks and rewards are
derived from small, marginal changes.”
Years of doing investments and business valuations taught Hinde
other hard realities, such as how even small expenditures can threaten one’s
income and assets. To him, it speaks directly to why Grinnell’s endowment
shouldn’t distract from the College’s need for support.
“Even students who pay the full boat are not paying the full cost of
their education,” Hinde says. “If you focus on the expense of educating
students as well as how difficult it is to get investment returns in any
economy, you’ll understand that assets are only a small part of the equation.
“It’s stunning to realize the time and effort it took to earn those assets,
and how difficult it is to prudently generate the income necessary to even
maintain the current price of a Grinnell education.”
34 The Grinnell Magazine
What do things cost?
How do we love the Grinnell
Experience? Let us count the ways.
And the expenses. Gifts at all levels are
key to making sure Grinnell students
continue to get an excellent liberal arts
experience. Here is a very short list of
expenses you may not have thought
much about:
Roll of “spike tape” for theatre
rehearsals: $5
• One color-changing LED theatrical
light: $2,200
• Colored powder for Festival of
Colors: $39.75
• Student staff for one Harris Center
event: $150
• Transport one visiting prospective
student to and from airport: $100
• Academic Advising semester
calendar (one copy): 10 cents
• Language tutors for one semester:
$5,350
• Airport shuttles for new
international students: $1,450
• Groceries for International Student
Organization Food Bazaar last year:
$3,900
• Airfare for most Rosenfield
Program speakers: $500–$600
• Music licensing fees for public
performance, annual: $1,310
• Flu shots for students, staff, and
faculty: $13,000
• Officials for one football game:
$1,120
• Overnight travel to competition
for one soccer player (out of state,
using a charter bus): $235
• Tape from the training room to
wrap ankles for one competition
(basketball, football, or soccer): $50
• An incarcerated student’s
enrollment in one semester of
the First Year of College Program:
$1,000
• Publish Local Foods Directory for
free distribution, annual: $100
• Garden seed for the campus
garden: $50-100
• Conducting savanna restoration
(mechanical removal of invasive
species): $850/acre
• Water test kit to measure nitrite/
nitrate, phosphate, turbidity,
chloride, flow: $105/kit
Thank you for your support.
Back, left to right: Peter Calvert ’79, Sherman Willis ’01, Allison Brinkhorst ’11, Cameo Carlson ’93, President Raynard Kington, Ryann Haines Cheung ’93, Jim Asplund ’88, Jim Decker ’75
•
Middle: Richard Raridon ’53, Angela Onwuachi-
Willig ’94, Mary Knuth Otto ’63, Catherine Gillis ’80, Barbara Hunt Moore ’65, Susan Henken-Thielen ’80, Rhonda Stuart ’86, Nancy Schmulbach Maly ’61, John (Fritz) Schwaller ’69, Lara Szent-Gyorgyi ’89, Bill Simmons ’58, Jeetander Dulani ’98
Front: Gof Thomson ’62, Rick Stuck ’82, Rania Mohamed Robb ’03, Ahsan Rahim ’11, W. Ed Senn ’79, Jayn Bailey Chaney ’05
Alumni Council News
Fall Meeting Focuses on Connections — and a Few Traditions
by Mary Knuth Otto ’63, Alumni Council Communications Committee
T
he leaves rustled and a few prairie flowers were
still in bloom for the Oct. 1 meeting of the
Grinnell College Alumni Council. Sessions and
events were planned jointly by Ed Senn ’79, council
president, and Jayn Bailey Chaney ’05, director of
alumni and donor relations at the College.
Early arrivals attended a Thursday evening dinner at
Relish restaurant in Grinnell, to which current students
and faculty members were also invited. They later joined
a large crowd at the Joe Rosenfield ’25 Center to hear
Peter Coyote ’64 speaking on “Intention: The Only
Force on Earth We Can Control,” followed by a dessert
reception. Both gatherings provided opportunities to
renew Grinnell ties and set the tone for the upcoming
work of the council.
Friday’s first all-council event was a lunch with
President Raynard S. Kington. As we entered, we were
disarmed by the request to don traditional (yes, from
my era) Grinnell College scarlet and black beanies,
gifts of Ed Senn and specially crafted in Washington,
D.C., using an actual 1964 beanie as a pattern — thanks
to Barbara Benda Jenkins ’64. Instantly united as
Grinnellians, we picked up lunch plates and welcomed
President Kington. He emphasized his commitment to
broadening and deepening relationships between the
College and the alumni body.
A second meeting with the president followed
a “Here Come the Pioneers” dinner at the Harris
Center, which also involved class agents and class fund
directors. Here, the president elaborated on his vision for
Grinnell’s excellence in a new era [see “Strategy Session”
on Page 4 for details]. The evening began with a few
rousing verses of “Here Come the Pioneers” and “Sons
— and Daughters — of Old Grinnell,” which inspired
both nostalgia among alumni and indulgent smiles by
student waiters. It concluded with a Pub Quiz Night
with the Student Alumni Council at Lyle’s Pub.
Committee chairs reported on their committees’
activities, which prompted discussions.
• The Communications Committee continues to
foster dialogue between the College and the alumni
body and is helping update the Forum website.
• The Alumni Engagement Committee has worked
to strengthen regional networks and to institute a
concept called “Event-in-a-Box,” for areas where the
alumni population is sparse. It has also scheduled
the second annual Global Day of Service for June
11, 2016.
• The Alumni Student Connections Committee
asked the council to support the senior class gift,
encouraged class ambassador-sponsored events
among students, and refined the mentoring program
Winter 2015
35
Prompted
Giving
between alumni and students.
The Stewardship Committee
joined donor relations at
the College to recognize the
growth of alumni giving.
• The Alumni Awards
Committee reported
receiving 28 nominations for
the 2016 awards.
An informative panel
presentation called “College
Financing 101,” held in ARH
302, was designed for all
volunteers. The aim was to bring
us up to date on the basics of
Grinnell’s approach to finances
and to provide an opportunity for
discussion and feedback. Speakers
were Kate Walker, vice president
for finance and treasurer;
Shane Jacobson, vice president
for development and alumni
relations; Andrew Choquette ’00,
director of investments; and Brad
Lindberg, director of financial
aid.
The fall Alumni Council
activities concluded with a
Saturday evening dinner at
Grinnell House and an allvolunteer party at the home of
Nancy Schmulbach Maly ’61,
former Alumni Council president.
Want to join the Grinnell
College Alumni Council? The
Alumni Council is a group of
26 Grinnell alumni and two
student representatives working
under the auspices of the Office
of Development and Alumni
Relations. The council’s mission
is to foster strong connections
between alumni and the College
and among the 20,000 Grinnell
alumni located in the 50 states
and 55 nations.
We welcome applications
for membership, due Jan. 5 each
year, from all alumni. Additional
information is available at forum.
grinnell.edu/alumnicouncil.
•
36 The Grinnell Magazine
Celebrating Pioneer Football
The prompt: Tell us about a memorable musical
or theatrical performance at Grinnell.
Gift honors namesake of Rosenbloom Field
Remember to Save
In 1992 I took Lighting Design with [Philippa] “Pip”
Gordon, [assistant professor of theatre]. I was so excited
for my first time as light board operator on the computer
board in Roberts Theatre. It was for Scenes From the Life
of Billy the Kid, directed by Sandy Moffett.
My first day at the board, Pip and I spent hours
cueing the show. In one scene Barry Gilbert ’94, I
believe it was, had a very long monologue sitting
on a saddle on a “horse” alone on stage. We spent at
least an hour working on that one scene alone. Pip
created the most beautiful sunrise that slowly built
throughout the monologue. I was completely fascinated
by the emotional effect that lighting could add to a
performance. After that grueling cueing session Pip
called it a day and told me to shut down and head home.
The next afternoon when I got back into the booth
I turned on the board to find everything was gone. Not a
cue! Being new to computers I didn’t know I had to save!
We had to redo everything in a fraction of the time. The
show still looked great, but we just didn’t have the time
to fully recreate that gorgeous, burning sunrise. Possibly
the most important lesson I learned at Grinnell: Always
save your work!
Football games
on crisp autumn
afternoons
have enhanced
college life for
generations
of Grinnell
students, and
alumni are honoring the experience
with generous gifts of support for the
Pioneer gridiron program.
John Rosenbloom ’71 and
Kathy Rosenbloom have made
a significant bequest to Grinnell
football in honor of John’s father,
Abe Rosenbloom ’34, the namesake
of Grinnell’s football field. A threetime letter winner and stalwart
lineman during the Pioneers’ 1931–
33 seasons, Rosenbloom earned Des
Moines Register all-conference (then
Missouri Valley) honors in 1932 and
1933.
Rosenbloom Field was dedicated
in October 1975 and was made
possible by a gift from Virginia
Whitney Rosenbloom ’36 and her
husband Abe.
Additional recent support for
Pioneer football comes from a threeyear unrestricted gift provided by The
Strive Fund.
“The generosity and leadership
of these types of gifts are incredible,”
says Jeff Pedersen ’02, Grinnell
head football coach. “These gifts will
allow us to pursue the finest studentathletes from across the country
and will allow us to provide the
outstanding college experience and
playing experience they deserve.”
– Denton Ketels
A Regular Occurrence
Feminist folk singer Ani DiFranco’s performance (with
drummer Andy Stochansky) [Oct. 6, 1994, Harris
Center] was powerful, inspiring, and totally moving.
Despite the epic nature of the concert, it wasn’t as
well attended as expected due to a concurrent streaking
event happening outside on Mac Field. The backstage
doors were open and Ani and Andy had a decent view of
Grinnell’s cross country runners and their friends, racing
across the grass in their birthday suits.
I mustered courage to gush my enthusiasm for the
show. Ani smiled, thanked me and, gesturing out the
door, asked, “Is this a regular occurrence?”
Marya Janoff Baron ’95 and I looked at each
other and at our bare classmates outside. “Don’t take it
personally that they weren’t at your show. They didn’t
know what they were missing. It’s just that Grinnellians
pretty much like to get naked as often as possible.” The
performers laughed and went back to watching their own
show of hooting and hollering naked college kids. I like
to think it was a memorable night for them, too.
– Lynn Makau ’95, Portland, Ore.
The Police
– Mara Fishman Gossack ’95, Cave Creek, Ariz. It was spring of 1979 and New Wave music was
The Play’s the Thing
The year was 1960, the venue ARH theatre, the play
Shakespeare’s Macbeth, directed by Ned Donahoe,
[professor of speech].
Gordon “Rock” Knutson ’62 [deceased] and I
were lighting crew, working in a cramped booth behind
the scenes, on the next level up, stage left. The booth
was open to the stage below through a small, unglazed
window.
Gordon and I mostly kept our voices down when
the play was going on. It was during a rehearsal that
Gordon perpetrated his memorable prank.
Late in the play (5:3:19–29), King Macbeth Joe
Nassif ’60 calls for his servant, Seyton. He calls the
name twice, speaks a short monologue, then thunders,
“Seyton!” This is the cue for the actor portraying the
servant to enter.
But before Seyton could make his entrance, Gordon
shouted through the window, in a fake falsetto as I
remember, “You called?”
– Floyd “Skip” Hughes ’62, Greenfield, Ind.
sweeping the nation. Georgia [Dentel] was able to
book the Police, the hottest band in this genre to play
Darby Gym. On the day of the show I ran into John
Buckwalter ’79, the Grinnell concert chairman, and he
invited me over to his off-campus house for dinner.
Through the wonder of Georgia, I now have a
lifelong memory of sharing a spaghetti dinner and a great
conversation with Sting and the boys on a cold, early
spring afternoon in Iowa.
– Bob Greenberg ’80, Dallas
Prompt for Spring 2016: The people we meet because of Grinnell — the classmates, the professors, the staff members, the townspeople, the alumni — affect us in many ways. Describe an encounter with a Grinnellian who made a difference to you, whether the person brightened a cloudy day or changed the direction of your entire life.
Submit up to 200 words by Jan. 31, 2016, to [email protected] with “difference” in the subject line. If we publish your story, we’ll send you a special T-shirt.
Winter 2015
37
Classnotes
1930s
Louise Goodwin
McKlveen ’35
Louise Goodwin McKlveen, who
turned 101 in October, lived out a
lifelong dream Sept. 23, 2015, when she
threw out the first pitch in a Minnesota
Twins baseball game against the
Cleveland Indians. Always a sports fan,
McKlveen began watching baseball in
earnest when her boys played in Little
League and has admired the game
ever since. She watches every Twins
baseball game and has stuck by the
franchise through winning years as well
as through less successful seasons. Her
wish was fulfilled through a partnership
between her senior living community
and the nonprofit organization Wish of a
Lifetime, which makes dreams come true
for older adults.
waterfall gardens. Burns invites
everyone to check out his website at
www.appleseedventures.com.
Judith Wallace Crossett is medical
director for the Free Psychiatric Clinic
at the University of Iowa Hospitals and
Clinics. She has attracted more than 30
different faculty members to volunteer
for the clinic. One recent patient said:
“Thank you. I am so thankful this
program is available in our community.
The psychiatry resident, pharmacy
[student], and social work [student] who
saw me … were empathetic and I truly
felt heard by them. I did not realize how
ill I was getting until my assessments
[were done], and they were very clear
that I didn’t have to be [so ill] and that
there was hope. I have 20 years of social
advocacy and counseling experience and
can tell when someone has the right skill
set to do these kinds of jobs.”
doing the photography and my friend
Scott Rawlins, a professor at Arcadia
University, will be providing illustrations.”
Thornley specializes in immigration law
in Everett, Wash., and is a dual citizen of
the United States and Canada, licensed
to practice in both countries.
1977
DeBorah Buchanan Ahmed was named
to the St. Louis Civilian Oversight
Board, which independently receives and
reviews complaints against the St. Louis
Metropolitan Police Department. Since
1991, Ahmed has served as executive
director of the Cultural, Educational, and
Business Center at Better Family Life
Inc.
1978
The American Oxonian, Winter 2015,
reports that Susan Duffey Campbell was
one of four recipients of the inaugural
George Parkin Service Award for
dedicated volunteer service to the Rhodes
Trust at the University of Oxford.
1969
In late August, U.S. District Judge Henry
Wingate temporarily blocked the state of Mississippi from carrying out executions in a case that challenges the state’s lethal
injections methods as cruel and unusual.
1981
In addition to serving as federal judge
Rick Lee ’81
for the Southern District in Mississippi,
Wingate has been on the College’s board
Rick Lee was
since 2000.
recognized in the
2015 issue of Oregon
Super Lawyers
magazine that
identifies the top 5
1970
percent of attorneys
Joe Berry and his wife Helena
in the state, chosen by
Worthen are teaching labor studies
their peers and through research of Super
at Ton Duc Thang University in Ho
Lawyers, a Thompson Reuters business.
Chi Minh City in Vietnam. Berry
This is the ninth consecutive year Lee
occasionally contributes to his wife’s
has been included in the category of
blog (HelenaWorthen.wordpress.com)
insurance coverage.
about their adventures, of which Joe
says, “Followers and responders are most
1982
welcome, of course. In case anyone was
Russell Pierce was keynote speaker
wondering, even old people can have
at the National Alliance on Mental adventures.”
Illness’s 32nd annual Massachusetts State
Convention, Oct. 18, 2014. As director
1975
of the Massachusetts Department of
Terry Thompson Thornley writes:
Mental Health’s Office of Recovery and
“In December, I am going back to
Empowerment, he spoke about the role
Egypt (fifth time) to help one of my
of peer voices and volunteers and received
Egyptologist friends write a book about
the organization’s award for Emerging
the hidden features of the Temple
Peer Voice.
of Amun-Ra at Karnak. I will be
1980s
1970s
1960s
1963
Peter Kranz was a visiting professor for
eight weeks this summer at Naresuan
University, Phitsanulok, Thailand. “I was
invited by the faculty of nursing, who
had me teach both undergraduate and
graduate students basic counseling skills
as well as share knowledge of research
ideas with faculty,” he writes.
1968
Dan Burns has started Appleseed
Ventures, a company that employs
autistic teens and young adults to
assemble and package aquaponics
38 The Grinnell Magazine
Get a Haircut, Read a Book
Alum helps young boys learn to love reading.
Photo by Andy Kropa ’98
1935
ALUMNI PROFILE ALVIN IRBY ’07
A Saturday morning haircut ignited
a passion and later a program that
is drawing Alvin Irby ’07 national
attention.
“I want to change the
conversation and spark national
discussion about reading, especially
for black boys,” Irby says. “The issue
is not capacity or ability. The issue
is identity. Instead of asking ‘Why
aren’t they reading?’, let’s ask ‘Why
shouldn’t they be reading?’ Their
social cues are not there. They may
never see black adult males reading
and engaging with books. They may
never have black role models in the
classroom.”
While student body president
at his Little Rock, Ark., high school,
Irby conducted a survey and found
that, in general, students didn’t
read beyond what was required of
them. On his own, Irby asked to be
switched to Advanced Placement
English, where he “fell in love with
reading and thought everyone else
should too.”
After graduating from Grinnell
with a sociology degree, Irby
moved to New York City with an
assistantship at the Bank Street
School for Children, teaching 9and 10-year-olds. He credits Katya
Gibel Mevorach, Grinnell professor
of anthropology, with guiding him
to the independent demonstration
school, which her son attended.
Irby then taught first grade at
Bronx Public School 69.
On a Saturday, while waiting for
a haircut at a local barbershop, Irby
observed one of his students, also
waiting, acting out, running around,
being bored. “He was my student,
and I thought he should be using his
time better. He should be reading,”
Irby says. He went home that day
and wrote a one-page statement
about the need to create spaces in
barbershops where black boys could
read.
Irby put the idea for what would
become Barbershop Books on the
shelf as he worked as a founding
teacher at a New York City charter
school, finished a master’s degree,
and started doing standup comedy.
Then he delved into a two-year
role as education director at the Boys
Club of New York in East Harlem.
When he decided he needed formal
management training to advance
his work, he applied to New York
University’s Wagner School of
Public Service, entered a nonprofit
management program, and “used
every class to start Barbershop
Books.
“Once I completed my M.P.A., I
knew I was ready to start Barbershop
Books,” Irby says. “I used all of
my own money, plus some crowd
funding, to help pilot the program
in six reading spaces in Harlem and
Brooklyn barbershops.”
A public policy competition
drew national attention to his
project, and Irby has since received
requests from cities across the
country to bring Barbershop Books
to Anchorage, Baltimore, and Kansas
City, to name a few.
Each barbershop book space
costs $500 to stock with “culturally
diverse, age-appropriate, and
gender-responsive books,” as well
as an attractive yellow reading chair
and book sling. Irby is working
full time to apply for grants and
solicit strategic partnerships with
companies that are now needed to
launch the program in other cities.
He won a $25,000 Wall Service
Award from Grinnell College in
2015 that he’ll use to expand the
program.
“We are all a collection of our
experiences. I don’t take for granted
that I’ve had opportunities but I
want to use my experience to change
how black boys identify themselves
as readers.”
One haircut, one book at a time.
– Cindy Deppe
Winter 2015
39
Classnotes
1986
Robert Quashie recently started a new
position as director, business analysis, for
the American Dental Association.
1988
Paula Rue Dillon has assumed the role of
director of managed care for the Illinois
Hospital Association, the chief lobbying
and advocacy association for 200-plus
hospitals and health care systems in
the state, working with legislators,
regulators, and state and national policy
leaders. Her role includes developing
policy and advocacy strategies related to
managed care, payer operational issues,
structuring alternative reimbursement
methodologies, and implementing health
care information exchanges.
1989
Laura Allender Ferguson is a founder
and CTO at Create Inc., a real estate
software startup in Washington, D.C.
Ferguson was included in some recent
articles about women in technology,
including an article on women led
startups in the District of Columbia.
1990s
1990
Benn Tannenbaum was elected a
fellow of the American Physical
Society “for outstanding contributions
to international peace and security
by addressing nuclear arms control,
nonproliferation, and terrorism; and
for mentoring young scientists and
educating students to bring science to
bear on societal challenges.”
1991
Daniel Werner received the national
2015 Public Justice Foundation’s Trial
Lawyer of the Year award on July 14,
2015. Werner was part of the legal team
behind one of the largest labor trafficking
cases ever brought in the United States.
At the Southern Poverty Law Center,
Werner spearheaded the case, David
v. Signal International, which resulted
in a $14 million verdict for immigrant
Indian workers recruited to rebuild
the Gulf Coast in 2005 after hurricane
destruction.
40 The Grinnell Magazine
ALUMNI PROFILE LUNA RANJIT ’00
Adhikaar Means Rights
Anna Ryon ’97
Anna Ryon married Kevin Althaus on June 20, 2015,
in Des Moines, Iowa. The ceremony was held at the
Pappajohn Sculpture Park, next to Tony Smith’s
sculpture “Marriage.” The ceremony was officiated
in person by Brigit Monson Stevens, spouse of Joe
Stevens ’95, and virtually by Kerry Bart ’94, who
joined the ceremony by Skype from Barboursville,
W. Va. Attending were: Lori Leinbach McAllister ’83,
Mark McAllister ’81, Joanne Sackett ’90, Joe Stevens
’95, Scott’98 and Sarah Eagan ’98 Anderson and their
children, and Josie Gerrietts ’10. The ceremony was
also attended by family and friends (including far too
many Grinnellians to mention individually) who were able to watch the ceremony
online with only minor technical difficulties. Other than random park-goers who
stopped to enjoy the show, only Grinnellians and their families attended the event.
The couple rode their bicycles to the park for the ceremony. The bride wore a cycling
jersey and skirt with a veil
attached to her visor. The
groom wore a tuxedo T-shirt
and shorts, along with a top
hat that, unfortunately, did not
fit under his bike helmet. Most
of those attending also brought
their bicycles. Following the
ceremony, the group formed
a bicycle parade and rode to
their lunch destination.
1992
Frank Douma was named director of
the State and Local Policy Program at
the University of Minnesota’s Humphrey
School of Public Affairs, October 2015.
1995
After a 20-year career in information
technology, Daniel Jacobsohn is leaving
the world of computing to start a new
business that will buy, sell, and trade
new and used Legos. He and Gwen
Costa Jacobsohn opened their Bricks
& Minifigs franchise store in Madison,
Wis., in late October.
Rhodes College English professor Scott
Newstok was elected to Humanities
Tennessee’s board of directors,
September 2015. The term runs through
2019. Founded in 1973, Humanities
Tennessee is dedicated to promoting
lifelong learning, civil discourse, and an
appreciation of history, diversity, and
community among Tennesseans.
Scott Samuelson ’95
Scott Samuelson, professor of philosophy at Kirkwood
Community College, Iowa City, Iowa, received the $50,000
Hiett Prize in the Humanities, one of the nation’s most
prestigious honors in humanities, November 2015. The
award identifies those in early humanities careers whose
work shows extraordinary promise and has a significant
public component related to contemporary culture.
Understanding the needs of the Nepali people
Long before the devastating April
2015 earthquake shook her home
country, Luna Ranjit ’00 knew the
depth and range of needs of the
Nepali people.
In 2005, she co-founded
Adhikaar, a nonprofit organization
dedicated to human rights and social
justice issues faced by more than
40,000 Nepali immigrants in New
York City.
As executive director of
Adhikaar, which means “rights” in
Nepali, Ranjit says, “We plan as
much as we can, but as a convenient
walk-in community center, we deal
with different issues every day. We
work on workers’ rights, access to
health care, immigration rights, fair
pay, and citizenship.”
The earthquake in Nepal
brought a flood of requests from
immigrants trying to get in touch
with their families, which the agency
helped facilitate. “The walk-in traffic
has increased significantly. We
provided a space where people could
talk and feel supported,” Ranjit says.
The traffic also increased
because of Adhikaar’s quick action
to gain temporary protected status
for Nepalis who were trying to
immigrate, so they could use available
services to also assist family members
still in their native land.
During this hectic period, Ranjit
worked closely with state legislators,
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo’s
office, and the state’s Congressional
leadership to secure the temporary
status. “Building relationships over
the past 10 years came in handy.
Adhikaar was one of the leading
organizations in this tough battle,”
Ranjit says.
“We are so happy that officials
came together to make it happen
so quickly. It’s been an insane few
months but with very positive
outcomes and major victories.”
During the past 10 years, Ranjit
has seen needs grow among Nepali
immigrants, from individuals to
multigenerational families. Many of
them are now U.S. citizens.
in Washington, D.C.
“Grinnell has played an
important role in Adhikaar,” Ranjit
says, recalling that a $500 check
from economics professor Mark
Montgomery in 2005 “meant that
we could stop talking about creating
an organization and actually do it.
“I had a ‘backpack office’ until I
received that check. Then I received
the Wall Service Award [in 2006],
which meant we could rent space
and be more visible.
“Other members of the Grinnell
faculty have also continued to
support us over the years. There has
always been a standing offer to help
in any way.
“We’ve had Grinnell interns
and volunteers, hosted students on
break tours, and had a Grinnell grad
on staff,” Ranjit recalls. “Grinnell’s
preparation in writing has also been
invaluable in my responsibilities for
grants-writing.”
“We are trying to make sure we
meet the growing and changing
needs of the Nepali community with
both new and existing programs.”
“The field of social justice is
definitely my life’s work, whether it’s
at Adhikaar or other causes.”
Ranjit earned a master’s degree
in public administration from
Princeton University after graduating
from Grinnell with an economics
major and global development
studies concentration. Before
founding Adhikaar, she worked with
Asian and South Asian communities
Adhikaar celebrated its 10th
anniversary at a fundraising gala in
New York City on Nov. 19. “We are
trying to make sure we meet the
growing and changing needs of the
Nepali community with both new
and existing programs,” Ranjit says.
“The 10th anniversary is a good
reason to reflect and plan for our
future.”
– Cindy Deppe
Winter 2015
41
Classnotes
Classnot
es
1999
Ryan Redmond and Amber Redmond
announced the birth of their first child, a
boy, Egan Otis Redmond, Dec. 24, 2014.
2000s
2000
Susanna Drake ’00
Susanna Drake received
tenure at Macalaster
College in St. Paul,
Minn. Drake teaches
in the religious studies
department; her research
interests include early
Christian and Jewish relations, gender
and sexuality in late antiquity, and
biblical interpretation in art and text.
2001
Shana Barchas has been promoted from
education specialist to education director
at Children’s Fairyland in Oakland, Calif.
“Ask for me when you come with your
children and I’ll let them groom the
donkeys!” Barchas writes.
John Aerni-Flessner and Lauren
Aerni-Flessner ’04 announced the birth
of their second child, a daughter, Charlie
Elizabeth Aerni-Flessner, Sept. 19, 2015.
Courtney Gengler and Travis Groo were
married in Marysville, Calif., July 18,
2015. Attending were Shannon Hammen
Miner ’01 and Tammy Baker Dann ’01.
Dolph Robb and Rania Mohamed
Robb ’03 announced the birth of their
third child, first son, Pierce Anthony
Brandon Robb, Aug. 12, 2015. Paternal aunt is Natisha Robb ’14. He is named
in memory of G. Anthony Smith ’01 and
Brandon Martinez ’01.
42 The Grinnell Magazine
2002
Saunia Powell, coordinator of the
Grinnell College Innovators for Social
Justice Prize, has taken on a leadership
role at the Wesley Foundation at the
University of Iowa, November, 2015.
The National Law Journal named Damien
Specht to its “D.C. Rising Stars” list of
the “most accomplished young attorneys
in the D.C. area,” Sept. 14, 2015. He is
co-chair of the government contracts/
corporate transactions group at Jenner &
Block.
2003
Michael Andersen and Maureen Young
were married in Portland, Ore., on
June 27, 2015, the warmest night ever
recorded in Portland. Standing in nearby
kiddie pools were their housemates
Brian K. Smith ’00 (who served as stage
manager) and Electra Allenton ’03. Also
in attendance: Roy Huggins ’99, Courtney
Sherwood ’00, Ann Myers ’02, Dana
Watson ’02, Erik Burton ’03, Heather
Glidden ’03, Ellery Sills ’03, Matt
Wilson ’03, Lindsey Kuper ’04, Dan
Muzyka ’04, and Mark French ’05.
2004
Eric Blevins claimed two silver medals
in the 1-meter and 3-meter events
at the 16th World Masters Diving
Championships in Kazan, Russia.
Blevins, nicknamed “Country,” was a
two-time All-American at Grinnell
and became the first diver to win eight
Midwest Conference championships. He
was elected to the Grinnell Athletic Hall
of Fame in 2014.
Annie Ewaskio was awarded a travel
grant from the Jerome Foundation to sail
with the Arctic Circle Residency, where
she will explore the Svalbard archipelago
in summer 2016. Artists and scientists
are invited to collaborate and create
work on board the vessel. This trip will
inform Ewaskio’s paintings, which depict
mythical landscapes and characters,
ghostly after-images of exploration in
boreal settings.
2005
Kate Kearney and Kyle Riggs announced
the birth of their first child, a son,
Theodore Donald Riggs, April 10, 2015.
2006
Lorin Ditzler and Ernest Niño Murcia
announced the birth of their first child, a
son, Alexander Kai Niño, July 25, 2015.
2007
Brady Austin and Christena McIntyre Austin announced the birth of their
second and third children, two daughters,
Harriet Marvel Austin and Eloise
Briar Austin, on June 29, 2015. They
join big brother Julian Austin as future
Grinnellians. Paternal grandparents are
Edwin Austin ’82 and Julie Douglas Austin
’82; uncles are Trevor Austin ’09, Scott
McIntyre ’09, and Toby Austin ‘14.
2009
David Arseneault and Rachel
Whitfield ’10 were married in Herrick
Chapel, Grinnell College, Sept., 19,
2015. They write, “A great number of
Grinnellians were part of our special day!”
Rachel Walberg and Amanda Underwood ’10 were married in St.
Paul, Minn., on June 13, 2015. They
have combined their last names and are
now the Walwoods. The wedding party
included Jess Cheney ’09, Mer Nechitilo ’09,
and Sam Tape ’09. In attendance: Emily
Mohl ’02, Joe Benson ’03, John Bell ’08,
Matt Johnson ’08, Emily Willborn ’08,
Kathryn Benson ’09, Nate GaileySchiltz ’09, Christine McCormick ’09,
Scott McIntyre ’09, Ali Nissen ’09,
Emma Silverman ’09, Anna Werner ’09,
Ethan Struby ’10, Julia Stewart ’10, and
Ben Tape ’12.
2010s
2013
Jacqui Vautin and Kevin Krueger
married in New Market, Ala., Sept. 20,
2015. The wedding party included Meg
Huey ’12 and Karen Gogins ’13.
Submit your Classnotes to:
Classnotes
Office of Development and Alumni Relations
Grinnell College
Grinnell, IA 50112
866-850-1846
Email: [email protected]
Website: bit.ly/1i26zrB
Deadlines:
Spring 2016 Issue: Jan. 15, 2016
Summer 2016 Issue: March 15, 2016
Authorized Personnel Only
Theatre and art major finds museum work deeply satisfying.
In the bowels of the Science
Museum of Minnesota, Tom Loddengaard ’76 opens a door with
the sign “Authorized Personnel
Only” on it. The whine of sawing
metal leaks out of the workshop.
Loddengaard leads visitors through
an orderly collection of workbenches
to his own, the place where he solves
the problems presented to him as an
exhibit fabricator — like building a
case for a Bambiraptor, a dinosaur
that was named for the Disney
character and is about half a meter
tall and two meters long.
If Loddengaard has done his
work well, the typical museum-goer
will never think about the stability
of a railing around an exhibit or the
type of adhesive used to hold artifacts
in place.
“There’s no manual that tells
you how to go about doing this,”
Loddengaard says. “You have to
figure it out for yourself. The range
of things that I get involved with is
kind of crazy.”
Not long after he started
working at the museum,
Loddengaard was building plywood
boxes — 34 of them — for a series of
exhibit items to rest on. A co-worker
noticed the repetitive work, which is
considered a kind of punishment at
the museum, and said, “So, who did
you piss off ?”
Loddengaard says, “Variety is
one of the really strong appeals of
what we’re doing here.”
In college, Loddengaard was a
theatre and art major. “My intent was
to do theatre set design.” He acquired
his basic tool skills in a tech theatre
course at Grinnell.
He describes himself as a welder,
cabinetmaker, machinist, electrician,
and media installer who dabbles in
mechanical engineering. “If there’s
Photos by Justin Hayworth
1997
Ozzie Ercan writes: “My wife Ann
Musser ’95 passed away on Sept. 29,
2014, after an epic three-year battle
with ovarian cancer. An interview with
her and me was published last summer
[2014] in the largest Turkish daily
[newspaper]. This went viral in Turkey
and led to many other stories written
about Ann: bit.ly/1sBYK6p.”
ALUMNI PROFILE TOM LODDENGAARD ’76
a skill needed to build something, I
learn it,” he says.
He works with a number
of other people with theatre
backgrounds. “It’s a really good
background, because you have a
history of building weird stuff that
no one’s ever built before.”
Once, for a television
commercial, Loddengaard built
a 16-foot-long loaf of bread in a
wrapper that an actor had to be able
to carry off a semitrailer — it had
wheels.
Before accepting the position
with the museum in St. Paul,
Minn., Loddengaard did a lot of
freelance work in television. “It was
working well enough,” he says. “I
got by. Sometimes the line between
freelance and unemployed is really,
really thin.”
Museum work presents not
only steady work and new creative
challenges but an opportunity for lifelong learning.
“The concept that science
literacy is an essential part of citizenship is key to what we do
here,” Loddengaard says.
– Michele Regenold ’89
Winter 2015
43
In Memoriam
ALUMNI PROFILE SHANA DOOLEY YORK ’98
The Fantastic Job She Never Dreamed Of
Making a difference in people’s lives with a goal of surviving her career
Photo by Justin Hayworth
As a kid, Shana Dooley York ’98
did not dream of becoming a
firefighter. “It wasn’t even something
I considered,” she says.
“I was always interested in
science-type stuff,” York says. She
majored in biology, which she loved,
and at first she considered becoming
a doctor or a physical therapist, but
“school wasn’t really me,” she says.
After graduating, she returned
home to Minneapolis and worked
for a YWCA girls’ math and science
program. When a female firefighter
spoke to the girls about her work,
York says she had more questions
than the girls did.
She applied to the Minneapolis
Fire Department and was hired in
2001.
As a woman in a maledominated field, York says that being
female is always on the radar. “I feel
accepted within the department,” she
says. “It’s known that we can do the
job. It’s more from people on calls.”
They sometimes question her
ability to do the job because besides
being female, she has a slender build.
44 The Grinnell Magazine
and you’re having trouble breathing
and I give you oxygen and I take
your blood pressure and reassure you
that the ambulance is on the way. For
that 10 minutes, when you were so
scared, I can reassure you. I can help
you make that day not worse.”
York started in the entry-level
firefighter position. “That’s the
person in the back seat [of the rig],”
she says. “We always joke that that’s
the person who does all the work.”
In her third year as a captain,
York still does many of the same
things. But now, she says, “I’m the
voice on the radio, making decisions
on the ground, and the person doing
all the reporting after the fact.”
York is also involved in training
firefighters
in 19 basic practices
But it’s her calm presence in stressful
such
as
ventilation,
forcible entry,
situations — stabbings, shootings,
hoses,
and
ladders.
Her
Grinnell
domestic assaults — that matters.
background
comes
in
handy
there.
“We get the down-and-dirty stuff
“Something
that’s
really
that isn’t so glamorous,” she says.
Like all Minneapolis firefighters, interesting is this idea of applying
York is also trained as an emergency science to what we know,” she says.
“We know that you can go in the
medical technician. Fire stations
respond to all 911 calls in their area, front door and put water on the fire
and the fire will go out. We used to
not just fires, and firefighters are
nearly the first responders to a scene, break out windows, and when you
break out windows you let the hot
York says.
air out, but you also let oxygen in.
Some may envy her work
We’re doing that stuff strategically
schedule — 24 hours on, 24 off, 24
with science in mind so we can be
on — working two days out of six.
effective with saving lives and not
But not everyone is cut out for the
getting ourselves in trouble.”
constant interruptions with calls
As a trainer, York seeks out
coming in or the emotional stress
current
knowledge and technology to
of a shooting each week during the
share
with
firefighters. She says the
summer or someone jumping off a
science
is
sometimes
intimidating to
freeway bridge. The camaraderie of
her
adult
learners,
so
being able to
fellow firefighters helps make the
break
it
down
is
helpful.
toughest days bearable.
“This job is fantastic,” York says,
For York, variety is the best part
“but
the goal is that you’ll be able
of the job. “I do something different
to
retire
healthy and do something
— Every. Single. Day.”
else.
That’s
why I work — so I can do
Another thing that appeals to
other
things.”
her is getting to make a difference
– Michele Regenold ’89
in someone’s life. “I go to your house
Anna Mae Wack, professor emerita of
physical education, Grinnell, Iowa, Oct.
15, 2015. A native Iowan, she taught in a
few Iowa high schools before working at
Grinnell College from 1955 to 1983. She
was a leader in coaching women’s sports
and played a key role in the planning and
construction of the Physical Education
Complex.
both from University of Texas at Austin.
She worked for many years as a music
teacher at Texas School for the Blind and
various other elementary schools. She is
remembered for her sharp wit, endless
energy, and dedication to her community.
Mary Grimm Baumgartner ’52, Oxnard,
Calif., July 26, 2016. Survivors include
her husband, David Baumgartner ’52.
Betty Liston Gotham ’47, Petaluma,
Calif., May 28, 2015.
Joan Davis Hirst ’53, Russell, Kan., Feb.
15, 2015.
1930s
Einar Graff ’47, East Dundee, Ill., Feb.
16, 2015. Survivors include his son, Erik
Graff ’74.
Carol Hoyt Mossman ’53, Youngstown,
Ohio, Dec. 4, 2014.
Marian Loetcher Siekmann ’38, West
Chicago, Ill, Aug. 1, 2015.
Dorothy Ziegenmeyer Davies ’39,
Franklin, Tenn., Aug. 5, 2015.
1940s
Dorothy Palmer Hulett ’40, Chino
Valley, Ariz., May 31, 2015. Dorothy
loved music and passed that love of music
on to her children and grandchildren.
Before any Christmas presents could be
opened, the attendees each shared an
instrumental or vocal solo.
Julie Booz Nuefeld ’41, Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., Aug. 13, 2015. Julie studied French
and piano at Grinnell and received
a prestigious scholarship to study at
the Sorbonne University in Paris.
Unfortunately, this honor was interrupted
by World War II. Julia became a
caretaker and music teacher to numerous
children and earned the respect and
gratitude of countless families. She is
remembered as a wonderful mentor and
engaged community member.
Ann Kilbride Allen ’49, Seattle, July 29,
2015. After graduating from Grinnell
with a degree in mathematics, Ann
received a teaching fellowship to attend
Smith College, where she earned a
master’s in physics in 1951. She worked
as science teacher for many years and as a
laboratory instructor at the University of
Hartford from 1980 until her retirement
in 1991. After her husband’s death
in 1980, Ann bought a small camper
and traveled across the United States
regularly over the next few decades, often
alone. She enjoyed planning only one
day in advance to visit far-flung relatives
and state parks and attend reunions at
Grinnell. She was 79 years old when she
made her last solo trip.
James D. Milliken ’49, Saratoga, Calif.,
Sept. 5, 2015.
Barbara A. Jones ’52, Lakewood, Colo.,
Aug. 7, 2015
George E. Nancarrow ’53, Munds Park,
Ariz., May 28, 2015.
Richard H. Schaefer ’53, Fresno, Calif.,
Dec. 18, 2014.
Priscilla J. Antrim ’54, Stevensville,
Mont., Aug. 12, 2015.
James R. Bonde ’54, Glen Ellyn, Ill.,
March 10, 2015.
Daryl Bielefeld ’54, Oct. 28, 2014.
Marilyn Smith Cole ’54, White Bear
Township, Minn., April 19, 2015.
The Rev. James H. Ameling ’55, San
Francisco, May 15, 2015.
Johanna Van Bemmel Friend ’55,
Markham, Ontario, Canada, Aug. 10,
2015.
Mary Martin Rehm ’49, Fort Collins,
Colo., Aug. 3, 2015. Mary graduated
from Grinnell with a degree in botany
and put her artistic abilities to use
working as an illustrator in the Seed
Laboratory. Her illustrations can still
Grace Brant Spindler ’41, Creston, Iowa,
be found in Grinnell’s collections to
Aug. 24, 2015.
this day. She was a skilled craftswoman,
Evelyn Ovram Manning ’43, Keosauqua, skilled in painting, basket weaving, and
flower pressing. Mary had an extensive
Ill., July 19, 2015.
collection of rocks and maintained her
love of the outdoors throughout her life.
Miriam Sherman McEwen ’43,
Survivors include her brother Donald
Lexington, Ky., June 18, 2015. Survivors
Martin ’49 and sister Ruth Martin
include her nieces, Miriam Bridgham
Minter ’51.
Ford ’64 and Mary Bridgham Gilroy ’66.
Robert E. Hays ’55, Clive, Iowa, May 9,
2015.
Marjorie Childs Voiers ’44, Austin,
Texas, June 13, 2015. After graduating
from Grinnell College, she earned a
master’s in music and, later, a certification
in early childhood special education,
Ann Lynn Farrell ’56, Indianapolis, June
20, 2015.
1950s
Emmett S. Goff ’50, Wilmette, Ill.,
June 23, 2015.
Carla Jackson Nelson ’55, Visalia, Calif.,
Aug. 2, 2014.
Matilda Surridge Dunlop ’56, Phoenix,
Aug. 15, 2015. Survivors include her
spouse, John Dunlop ’56. She volunteered
in the children’s ministry at her church
and led a Girl Scout troop, loving all
the kids she was privileged to know. She
helped foster kids through her role as
a court-appointed special advocate, in
addition to supporting unwed mothers
and local prison ministries.
Patricia Sloan Railsback ’56, Lutz, Fla.,
Sept. 24, 2015. Survivors include her
daughter, Kathryn Railsback ’80.
Winter 2015
45
In Memoriam
Lee B. Savage ’56, Palm Harbor, Fla.,
June 28, 2015.
William C. Letzkus ’58, Kerrville, Texas,
Feb. 15, 2015.
Robert R. Preston Sr. ’59, Des Moines,
Iowa, Sept. 15, 2015.
1960s
Jocelyn Williams Anderson ’61, St.
Louis, March 24, 2015.
James K. Jenks II ’64, Lyons, Ill., May
22, 2015.
William O. Staehlin ’64, Sarasota, Fla.,
Sept. 2, 2015.
1970s
Anna Marie Durr ’77, Montezuma,
Iowa, July 18, 2015. Throughout her life,
Marie was committed to her education.
She earned various degrees, including an
R.N. degree from Presbyterian St. Luke’s,
a B.S.N. from Grandview College, and
a B.A. in anthropology from Grinnell
College at the age of 37. Marie was
considered to be a “professional student”
by those around her and avidly pursued
her love of learning until her death. She
served as a nurse in the Army Nurse
Corps, Aramco, Iowa Shares, and the
Meskwaki Settlement, and through these
positions worked in Japan, Vietnam,
Thailand, and Saudi Arabia.
In Memoriam
Some alumni and friends inquire about
making a memorial gift. If you would like
to do so, please call 866-850-1846 and
ask for Jayn Bailey Chaney ’05.
Submitting a Death Notice
We hope to write a brief obituary for
each person for whom we receive a
death notice. We would like to include
interesting details about each person’s
life. When notifying the College, if you
happen to have additional information
you can share, we’d be happy to consider
including it. Notices may be submitted to
[email protected].
46 The Grinnell Magazine
IN MEMORIAM: RICHARD FYFFE, LIBRARIAN OF THE COLLEGE
Richard Fyffe, Samuel R. and MarieLouise Rosenthal Librarian of the
College and associate professor, died
on Nov. 5 of complications from
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). He
was 59. He had been on medical leave
from the College since Oct. 1.
Richard, who joined the College in
2006, spent three decades working to
elevate the status of liberal arts college
libraries. He will be remembered as a
profound thinker, a respected teacher,
and a gentle soul.
An award-winning librarian, Richard made vital contributions to
many national partnerships and consortia and was an eloquent advocate
for libraries’ central roles in a college’s educational mission.
Richard worked collaboratively with Grinnell faculty to develop
intellectual property policies and pass an open-access resolution. His
innovations helped reinvent the College’s libraries by creating a peermentoring program for research literacy and by rethinking collections
philosophy. Richard was also instrumental in the opening of Kistle
Science Library and the renovation of Burling Library, including
media collection improvements, installation of a computing commons,
expansion of the Burling lounge, and upgrades that make the libraries
more welcoming.
He ushered in sweeping improvements to library technology in
service of teaching and learning and faculty research. He launched
Digital Grinnell and opened the archives of Scarlet & Black. He
served with distinction on numerous campus committees and groups
supporting faculty, staff, and students.
Under his leadership, the College received an Excellence in
Academic Libraries Award from the Association of College and
Research Libraries and American Library Association in 2011.
Before coming to Grinnell, Richard was assistant dean for scholarly
communication at University of Kansas Libraries, after a decade at
University of Connecticut Libraries. He also served at the Essex
Institute and American Antiquarian Society. He was born and raised in
Asheville, N.C.
Richard is survived by his wife Ida, his father, sister, and several
nieces and nephews.
A memorial service attended by family, friends, faculty, staff, and
students was held Nov. 15 at the College’s Conard Environmental
Research Area.
Back Talk
An Unconventional Life
Appreciating the Grinnell experience from a distance
My daughter, Elise, challenged
me to write this essay. My beloved
daughter, a third-generation
Grinnellian currently working
for Grinnell College’s Office of
Communications, hit me with, “It
won’t hurt you to reflect on your
life, Mom.” So, here I sit, an expat
in Costa Rica, listening to children’s
gleeful shouts in Spanish, mountains
all around me, considering my life
and how Grinnell affected me.
I attended Grinnell in the
’70s, in a period of unrest, and I
was a born rebel. It was the first
time in my life that I had been
intellectually challenged, and I shall
be forever grateful for that. At the
time, we were all indoctrinated to
the “Grinnell Experience,” the idea
that people in the world would
value us for our amazing liberal arts
education.
I left Grinnell after two
years, for several reasons. I found
the student body to be a bit too
neurotically obsessive for me, and
there was a paucity of class offerings.
More immediately, I had fallen
in love with a rather infamous
Grinnellian, the late great Chris
Freeberg ’73. He had the best Bose
901 speakers on North Campus and
the dubious distinction of getting
kicked out for not attending classes
for an entire semester while he
blasted Grateful Dead tunes from
the top of Gates Tower. It was an
auspicious beginning that launched
me on a life of adventure. I scoffed
at the “Grinnell Experience” once
I realized that almost no one had
heard of Grinnell, and because it
was the ’70s and scoffing was an art
we had mastered.
But Grinnell never left me.
Academically, it was never matched
by my further university experiences,
but there was something more.
At Grinnell, through my own
endeavors and the encouragement
of professors, I learned that I could
research anything, reason anything,
attempt anything. It was subtle, but
it was deeply ingrained in me.
I had business aptitude, honed
in me by my father and his cronies,
who taught me how to work a room
— “Never sit down, Jane. You’ll
be stuck with the boring people.”
How to read a balance sheet, how
to make business decisions, how to
do public speaking, how to order a
sophisticated drink. And business I
did. But the rebel in me kept taking
long absences to discover the world,
to become a river guide, to wander
cross-country. This side of me
eventually won out.
I have been plagued at times
with the thought that I never “lived
up to my potential,” careerwise. I do
truly wish I had finished at Grinnell.
But nights spent under the stars
on the banks of a river, listening
to a wound up executive from Los
Angeles baring his soul, telling me
there had to be something more;
days spent tutoring Native American
kids, attending truancy hearings,
reading Huck Finn to tough teenage
native boys as they lay on couches
around me; homeschooling my own
kids, standing in front of a white
board, them in their pajamas, giving
them spelling words like “plebian”
and “proletariat” as we all giggled
— these are the things that have
mattered, the things that make up
the kaleidoscope of my life.
And in a very real way, I have
Grinnell to thank for this. My
Jane Howe ’76, mother of Elise
Hadden ’14 and daughter of Doris
Lothringer Howe ’44, made a
political and cultural defection
from the United States to Costa
Rica, where she lives in the
mountains with a view of the sea.
Grinnell experience opened my eyes
to my abilities, and to the world. I
sit here in Costa Rica, loving my
life, struggling to become fluent in
Spanish — why did I take French?
— wondering what will come next.
Thank you, Elise, for challenging
me. And thank you, Grinnell, for all
that you gave me.
P.S. I still wish I had become
an archaeologist. And I had a huge
crush on Gerald Lalonde, classics
professor extraordinaire.
Have an idea for a “Back Talk” essay?
Submit your idea or your 500- to 700­
word essay to [email protected].
We’re open to all sorts of topics from
alumni, students, faculty, and staff.
Winter 2015
47
That’s So Grinnellian
Photo by Justin Hayworth
48 The Grinnell Magazine
Sun bursts through
the leaves near Rose
Hall on East Campus
Winter 2015
49
Periodicals
The Grinnell Magazine
Grinnell College
733 Broad Street
Grinnell, Iowa 50112
ISSN 1539-0950
Iowa View
Photo by Justin Hayworth
Goodnow
Hall tower
50 The Grinnell Magazine